Let the River Run
The Blanco River winds 87 miles through green hills and dramatic, rocky bluffs. It is dammed in more than ninety places, and a quirk in state law has ceded ownership of most of the riverbed to private...
View ArticleFrame by Frame
“You’re the one that makes the beautiful movies.”That’s what Abraham Zapruder’s assistant, Lillian Rogers, told him on the morning of November 22, 1963. It was meant as a gentle retort. Zapruder had...
View ArticleLow Stakes on the High Seas
Texas, since its very inception, has been peopled with chance-takers—trailblazers, frontiersmen, adventurers—for whom risking everything was as commonplace as the dirt upon which they ran their cattle...
View ArticleRoar of the Crowd
If you want to get a vocal response from readers, forget topics like politics or the Dallas Cowboys—that’s child’s play. All you have to do is put two words together: “beans” and “chili.” More to the...
View ArticleBlood and Sugar
Driving through Sugar Land, the suburb of 90,000 half an hour southwest of Houston, you can see the signs of growth everywhere. There’s the Smart Financial Centre, a $90 million, 6,400-seat concert...
View ArticleDenton A. Cooley, 1920-2016
During Denton Cooley’s funeral, in November, many of the people gathered at Trinity Episcopal Church were likely thinking how much better it would have been if he had been there. So many of his pals...
View ArticleOld News: An Illustrated Look at Curious Headlines From a Bygone Era
“A number of sombreros, smuggled over from Mexico, have been seized in San Antonio.” —Brenham Weekly Banner, November 14, 1879The post Old News: An Illustrated Look at Curious Headlines From a Bygone...
View ArticleMeanwhile, in Texas . . .
A Dallas man spread his friend’s ashes in the orchestra pit at the New York Metropolitan Opera, prompting an evacuation because police thought it may have been anthrax. Thieves broke into a trailer and...
View ArticleWhy, That Son of a Steak!
On a cool morning in early October, a 2,400-pound black bull named Alpha struts around a pasture east of the Panhandle town of Canyon as if he’s royalty. His parentage, though, is a mystery. Alpha is...
View ArticleThe Checklist
Art“James Drake: Anatomy of Drawing and Space (Brain Trash)” (El Paso Museum of Art, through January 8) A Lubbock native, Drake has spent the past forty or so years earning acclaim for his sculptures...
View ArticleA Fond Farewell
There has been no greater honor in my professional life than working at Texas Monthly. I started here as an intern in 1996 while pursuing a master’s degree in literature. I had never worked in...
View ArticleShe’s the Sheriff
On November 8, Zena Stephens, the chief of police at Prairie View A&M University, was elected sheriff of Jefferson County, in Southeast Texas, making the 51-year-old Democrat the state’s first...
View ArticleKeith Kreeger Studios
In his East Austin studio, Keith Kreeger sets his three kilns to 2,400 degrees. Glazing inside are glossy black porcelain bowls and serving dishes with gold paint dripping from the rims. Kreeger’s...
View ArticleThe Prisoner
Every once in a while, Edwin Debrow dreams that he is a boy again. He is standing in a field of freshly mowed grass. It is a warm day, with no clouds in the sky. The sun is on his face. There are no...
View ArticleInfinite Loop
The cocktail menu at Midnight Rambler, in the basement of Dallas’s Joule hotel, is in many ways as much an artistic expression as the extensive collection of artworks showcased in the hotel proper, an...
View ArticleThe Earth Below
I commence a walk one morning this fall, among the last warm days of the year. Thin, ribbed clouds overhead. Intermittent sunshine. Breezy. Our little place in Marfa is twenty flat acres on the...
View ArticleOn Tapa His Game
This is the tapas bar I had in mind all along,” says Jason Dady, the chef and co-owner of the Bin. The forty-year-old is chatting with customers at a tall wooden table in a converted twenties-era...
View ArticleChicken and Dumplings
Could there be a better time for chicken and dumplings? The very word “dumpling” brings to mind coziness and sustenance and gentle pats on heads that are at this moment likely addled by seasonal...
View ArticleA Year in the Life of Texas Monthly
It wouldn’t be accurate to say that there’s never a dull moment here at Texas Monthly—we’re a fairly bedraggled lot by the end of our deadline week—but it goes without saying that there’s never been a...
View ArticleTrip Guide: Fort Worth’s Near Southside
There he was, a black bolo tie around his neck and a felt Stetson on his head, back on a small stage in his hometown. It was the end of last June, and Leon Bridges had taken a time-out from his world...
View ArticleWhere Everybody Knows Your Name
There’s nothing quite like drinking in a real dive bar. These treasured spots lack many of the modern amenities we’ve come to expect from newer, trendier places, and I’ll get to that in a minute. But...
View ArticleWhere Everybody Knows Your Name
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View ArticleThe 2017 Bum Steer Awards
It will take decades for scholars and forensic anthropologists to tell us what to think about the year 2016. No one was immune to the craziness that ran roughshod over our fair land: not the Dallas...
View ArticleCapitol Crisis
She is identified in court records simply by the initials “S.A.” While we don’t know her name, we do know a great deal about the emotional and physical abuse she endured in Texas’s foster care system....
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