. . . . . "Harry Willson"@en . . . "Harry Willson"@en . . "Willson,+Harry"@en . "1116313935"^^ . . . "Harry Willson (23 July 1932 \u2013 9 March 2010) was a writer of fiction, satire, social commentary, and philosophy, and co-founder of Amador Publishers in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Willson was born in Montoursville, Pennsylvania. He attended Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania, and received a B.A. in chemistry and mathematics. He received a master's of divinity at Princeton Theological Seminary and studied Spanish at University of Madrid. He moved to New Mexico in 1958 with his wife and three children, and he served as Spanish-speaking Presbyterian missionary for eight years. Willson's views toward the church slowly changed, and he left the ministry in 1966. He became a teacher of history, English, and philosophy at Albuquerque Academy from 1966\u20131973 and at Sandia Prep from 1973\u20131976."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Harry Willson (23 July 1932 \u2013 9 March 2010) was a writer of fiction, satire, social commentary, and philosophy, and co-founder of Amador Publishers in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Willson was born in Montoursville, Pennsylvania. He attended Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania, and received a B.A. in chemistry and mathematics. He received a master's of divinity at Princeton Theological Seminary and studied Spanish at University of Madrid. He moved to New Mexico in 1958 with his wife and three children, and he served as Spanish-speaking Presbyterian missionary for eight years. Willson's views toward the church slowly changed, and he left the ministry in 1966. He became a teacher of history, English, and philosophy at Albuquerque Academy from 1966\u20131973 and at Sandia Prep from 1973\u20131976. For the next ten years, Willson wrote books and worked different jobs, including owning a worm ranch, selling produce from an organic garden, selling fireplace heater-inserts, and helping his wife open a drapery business. In 1986, he founded Amador Publishers with his wife, Adela Amador, and in 2006, Willson and Amador changed to Amador Publishers, LLC, with Zelda Gordon as co-owner and managing editor. Amador Publishers, LLC, has published more than thirty titles from more than fifteen authors, including Gene H. Bell-Villada, Donald Gutierrez, and . Willson believed his authors emphasized themes he valued, peace, ecology, harmony, and feminism."@en . . . . . . . . . "4731"^^ . . . . "39834278"^^ . .