The Bookshelf, Young Texas Reader, Blog Notes, & Texana Youtube Channel


CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO THE PARLOR's FULL LISTING.
The Texas Bookshelf is for single, specific books' reviews and author interviews . The Texas Parlor ranges more broadly than my other websites. The Young Texas Reader focuses on the youngest through teenagers. Texas Blog Notes surveys blogs of historical and literary interest. I've started a Will's Texana Youtube collecting channel where 1,000 videos are collected in 100 playlists . Find Will in Houston or at willstexana {at} yahoodotcom

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Texas author search via Twitter

If'n you'd druther search Twitter, without starting an account, you can go to the search page and enter < texas author > and you'll get results.  The most recent Tweets at 10:30 a.m. on July 22 are below for your inspection.  What it means?  I just don't know, but now you know as much as me.  http://twitter.com/ filedby: Check out Susan Elizabeth Phillips author of "Heaven, Texas" on FiledBy http://bit.ly/18nUvO (expand)
 
 

Texas Cockroach Satire

    square-logo-tcr.jpgHmm, how do you solve a interpretative problem like the Texas Cockroach, the Parlorians wonder about this mythological small town and its newspaper.

It's like a Texas answer to the Onion newspaper.  Yes a small Texas town, La Cucaracha, with the distilled, reduced essences, flavors, and quirks of Texas life.  Popular life styles, sports, religion, politics enjoy deflation.  Surrender your imaginary grip on sanity and be prepared to laugh at yourself and others:  http://www.texascockroach.com/

O P T I O N S   I N C L U D E:  Main Menu

 

 

Home

  • Local
  • Texas
  • Community
  • Sports
  • Church
  • Columns
  • LaCucaracha History
  • Letters to The Editor
  • Classified Ads
  • And there's their blog at MySanAntonio http://voices.mysanantonio.com/texascockroach/

    And the online store http://www.cafepress.com/texascockroach

    And a Facebook page

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Texas-Cockroach/110205667360

     

    Stonewashed Cap 

    Thursday, July 16, 2009

    Texas, Social Studies, and the Wall Street Journal

     
    Texas' neighbors are watching  and have noticed the initial script lines of "Texas All in the Family" being tried out on the Texas Education Commission's  front porch by actors of yet obscured faces.  Exactly who is acting the roles of Archie Bunker and Meat Head are yet to be defined.
     
    Of all news sources the Wall Street Journal considers the current Texas leaders' special approach to defining appropriateness or inclusiveness for our children's learning.  Texas revisits various parts of the curriculum about once every 10 years.  This year, social studies is one of those being visited for revision.  Stephanie Simon wrote a July 14 article entitled "The Culture Wars' New Frontier:  U.S. History Classes in Texas."
     
    By STEPHANIE SIMON
    The article begins:  "The fight over school curriculum in Texas, recently focused on biology, has entered a new arena, with a brewing debate over how much faith belongs in American history classrooms.
    The Texas Board of Education, which recently approved new science standards that made room for creationist critiques of evolution, is revising the state's social studies curriculum. In early recommendations from outside experts appointed by the board, a divide has opened over how central religious theology should be to the teaching of history."
    By July 16 morning there were 242 comments, read more at http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB124753078523935615-lMyQjAxMDI5NDE3NDUxMzQwWj.html
    If it weren't for the fact that millions of school children will be affected for the rest of their lives by the eventual decisions, the tragi-comic episodes to come could be viewed as simply entertainment of the "Family Guy" groundling level, not even constructive enough to be "King of the Hill."
    At the outset, the oddest thing I find is that somebody wants to exclude from the American history textbook Anne Hutchinson, the famous 1600's woman religious dissenter/teacher who was exiled from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for refusing to accept the gummit line on the REQUIRED religious formula and not to be confused (I suppose, but maybe not) with the current Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison who'll run in a primary against Governor Rick Perry who controls the commission's appointments. 
    Anyway, this current Texas ban of Anne Hutchinson brings to memory the recent attempt by some Texans to censor the book "Fahreheit 451," a novel against book censoring.  Connected to that memory is Louis Sachar's book "Holes," a Newbery-winning novel set in modern Texas where nonconformist children are condemned to endlessly dig holes for greedy adults looking for buried treasure.

    Tuesday, July 14, 2009

    UNT Portal to Texas History Continues Digitizing Newspapers

    The University of North Texas Library's "Portal to Texas History" has received continued funding to digitize historical Texas newspapers.  UNT's New Service offers the fuller story at
    Previously  "The UNT Libraries first received a two-year $397,552 grant from NEH in 2007, which allowed the Digital Projects Unit to digitize 108,000 pages of newspapers published in Texas. In addition to pages of the Houston Daily Post, which was established in 1885 and ceased publishing in 1995, the unit digitized pages of:
    •  the Brownsville Daily Herald
    • the Jefferson Jimplecute
    • the Palestine Daily Herald
    • the Jewish Herald, now published in Houston as the Jewish Herald-Voice;
    • and the defunct Fort Worth Gazette, which was also published as the Fort Worth Weekly Gazette and the Fort Worth Daily Gazette.
    The earliest pages of these newspapers date to 1883, and the latest to 1910.
    All of the pages are now available on the Chronicling America web site and will be placed by the end of the summer on the UNT Libraries' Portal to Texas History, which provides students and others with a digital gateway to collections in Texas libraries, museums, archives, historical societies and private collections."
    UNT's Cathy Hartman and Dreanna Belden clarify that an addition grant will assure work continues on other titles.  Read more at http://web3.unt.edu/news/story.cfm?story=11520

    Bob Wills Radio

    Gather around that talking box, put the box on the window, sit in the front porch's swings and rockers, and listen to Bob Wills.  "New interviews added each Monday at Noon (central time) and are available to listen to 24/7 after that. Older episodes are archived, so you won't miss a thing! "
     

     
     
     

    Monday, July 13, 2009

    UT Libraries and Google Digitization Project

    In case you've forgotten
     
    Several documents
     
    Google Book Search Logo 

    Betty Sue Flowers leaves UT

    Betty Sue Flowers leaves UT after career scattered over 45 years, most recently at the LBJ Library.

    Texas Oral History Association Awards

    Department Home Page
     
    The awards are self-described at http://www.baylor.edu/toha/index.php?id=29342

    Awards

    TOHA recognizes outstanding contributions to oral history by both individuals and institutions through three major awards:
    Read, too, about the latest winners of TOHA's Texas History Day Student Oral History Award.
    Visit the links above to discover
    • criteria for earning each TOHA award
    • people and projects who have earned TOHA awards, and
    • Award Nomination Forms

    Frontier Times Museum Texas Heroes Hall of Honor

      
    The Museum's self-description:  "The Frontier Times Museum was formally opened to the public on May 20, 1933 at a groundbreaking ceremony held on January 1, 1933. Hough LeStourgeon was one of the men who turned stones from pastures into a landmark museum worth treasuring.  /  Today the museum attracts visitors to Bandera interested in the history of the region. Frontier times and customs hold a fascination that endures and the Frontier Times Museum imparts much of that spirit."
            The first honorees for Bandera's Frontier Times Museum Texas Heroes Hall of Honor are  J. Marvin Hunter, J. Frank Dobie, Maudeen Marks, Captain Joe Bowman, Ray Wharton, Cleo Hearn, Kevin FitzPatrick, "Impresario" Terry Boothe, and Dr. Raul Gaona, Sr.
    Their website will likely soon reflect fuller information, but you can get a quick glance at some short biographies at the Bandera County Courier

    In the top 50 tourists sites

     
    The Galveston Daily News points us toward the Stoodthere.com website where currently Galveston's Moody Gardens, San Antonio's Alamo, and Dallas' 6th Floor Book Depository are in the top 50.  http://www.stoodthere.com/

    Judy Alter and 30 Years at TCU Press

     
    In Texas Letters: Judy Alter recalls her 30-year stint at TCU Press - Dallas Morning News Alter makes personal observations and glances back over the birthing of bibliographical units - oft called books.  She begins "Nearly 30 years ago, as coordinator of community education at Texas Christian University, I shared an office with the editor of TCU Press. One day he looked at me and asked, "Would you like to be editor?" (He was moving up to be director.) I said, "Sure," and that was my job interview. I knew nothing about publishing, and he knew only a bit more."
     
    Read more from her July 12 column "Texas Letters" at

    Saturday, July 11, 2009

    Texas as heroic geography ? - Bottum

    Within his longer commentary on "Local Color" Joseph Bottum in his "First Things / First Thoughts" blog remarked on "heroic geography."
     
    He writes, "In other words, we don't have many heroic types in American literature. What we have instead is heroic geography. The Virginian, the Down Easterner, the Texas Ranger, the cowboy, the Hooiser, the hillbilly, the Okie. These are tropes that serve the moral function filled in other cultures and other literatures primarily by heroes. And these geographical tropes survive well into our own era of indistinguishable shopping malls from Maine to California."

    Writers' League of Texas

    Since August of 2008, the Writers' League of Texas has had a blog entitled "A Brief Word"  at
    The posts categories include

    Agents

    UTSA Library Blog

    T H E    T O P    S H E L F -
    Blog of the UT San Antonio Library Archives and Special Collections
     
     
    Seems that around about last December 2008, UTSA's A&SC started a blog.  Rather pleasantly done too.  It's a mixture of new collections, spotlights on single items of interest, personnel matters, departmental themes, preservation techniques, exhibits, newsclippings, hot links to collections along topical lines, hot links to new collections descriptions, etc.  A good all-purpose media to serve the public with content information, technical news, and provision of mini-exhibits.
    At http://lib.utsa.edu/Archives/ you'll find a departmental self-description
    "The Archives and Special Collections Department serves as the Library's repository for primary source materials. The department acquires, catalogs and preserves special collections of rare books and manuscripts chiefly documenting the history of San Antonio and South Central Texas, and additionally holds UTSA's University Archives.
    The mission of the Archives and Special Collections Department is to support and enhance the University's instructional, research, and public service activities by providing access to information resources for learning and scholarship to University students, faculty, and staff.
    Materials and services are available to UTSA faculty, staff, students, and alumni, as well as to the local, national and international community."

    Dallas Morinig News Disturbs Torpor

    Those Dallas Morning News folks just can't let a hammock- sleeping Texan sway in the sweltering heat.  Now they've gone and disturbed the "Great Book Cannon."  In the OPINION BLOG Editor Keven Ann Willey, in her July 17 commentary on the Big Rich, stumbles off behind the altar and decides to ask if folks really like the relics left behind by the sancrosanct Texas writers.  She asked, "What's the best book about Texas in your opinion and what makes it so good?"  Yes, friends and neighbors, she got replies.
     
     
    DMN staff chimed in with their recommendations.  Even the unwashed public, who apparently still read, caressed their keyboards mentioning their druthers.
    But not one mentioned William Goyen, one of our finest who delicately fingered his way across the ghosts and neurons of your mind.

    1836-1985 Texas Newspapers available online

    The University of Houston Downtown Blog announced on June 26, 2009
     
     
    Texas Historical Newspapers: 1836-1985
    "Students of Texas history now have access to Texas Historical Newspapers with full-text articles from 41 Texas newspapers published between 1836 and 1985. The collection includes newspapers from major cities, such as Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Galveston, Houston, and San Antonio, as well as smaller towns like Clarksville, Huntsville, Nacogdoches, and Palestine. It even includes one issue of the early Spanish-language newspaper, Gaceta de Texas (1813). Coverage of the Dallas Morning News extends from 1885 to 1985. Overall, Texas Historical Newspapers has strong coverage of newspapers from the periods of the Texas Republic, early statehood, Reconstruction, and the early twentieth century.
    Look for Texas Historical Newspapers under History Databases or News Databases on the UHD Library website. "
     
    While a  wonderful resource, it is limited to students, faculty, etc.  Hmm, I wonder if general public folks who  walk into the UHD can use the system or is it available through the library terminals without passwords, etc.

    Exquisite Photos of Texas

    Exquisitely Bored in Nacogdoches is not boring.  Actually, EBN, nee Chris My Photo also has a remarkable Flickr website by the same name that companions his blog.
     
    The blog site, begun in the summer of 2005, is filled with photography and the sidebar has many topically grouped photos, including
     
           
           
         
     

    TEA Social Studies Expert Reviews

    Social Studies Expert Reviewers
     

     

    David Barton, President, WallBuilders
    Review of Current Social Studies TEKS

     

    Jesus Francisco de la Teja, Professor and Chair, Department of History, Texas State University
    Review of Current Social Studies TEKS

     

    Daniel L. Dreisbach, Professor, American University
    Review of Current Social Studies TEKS

     

    Lybeth Hodges, Professor, History, Texas Woman's University
    Review of Current Social Studies TEKS

     

    Jim Kracht, Associate Dean and Professor, College of Education and Human Development, Texas A&M University
    Review of Current Social Studies TEKS

     

    Peter Marshall, President, Peter Marshall Ministries
    Review of Current Social Studies TEKS 

     

    Read de la Teja, Hodges, and Kracht for commentary buttressed by their pro-public school, secular, social studies orientations.  Read Marshall, Dreisbach, and Barton for other focal points.  Contact the Curriculum Division at (512)463-9581 with any questions you may have or for an accessible version of the content on this page.

    And for the inquisitive: http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/curriculum/social/index.html

    Friday, July 10, 2009

    Porter Prize from UNT

    Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Short Fiction

    NEWS RELEASE FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS PRESS regarding the 2010 Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Short Fiction.
    The winner of this annual award will receive $1000 and publication by UNT Press. Entries will be judged by an eminent writer.
    Entries can be a combination of short-shorts, short stories, and novellas, from 100 to 200 book pages in length (word count between 27,500 and 50,000). Material should be previously unpublished in book form. Once a winner is declared and contracted for publication, UNT Press will hold the rights to the stories in the winning collection. They may no longer be under consideration for serial publication elsewhere and must be withdrawn by the author from consideration.
    Please include two cover sheets: one with title only, and one with title, your name, address, e-mail, phone, and acknowledgment of any previously published material. Your name should not appear anywhere on the manuscript except on the one cover page. Manuscripts for the 2010 award should be postmarked between May 1 and June 30, 2009. The winning manuscript will be announced in January 2010. Watch for more details in Poets & Writers.
    Manuscripts cannot be returned and must be accompanied by a $25 entry fee (payable to UNT Press) and a letter-sized SASE for notification.
     
    Prior Winners—
    Last Known Position by James Mathews was our 2008 winner, judged by Tom Franklin.
    Wonderful Girl by Aimee LaBrie was our 2007 winner, judged by Bill Roorbach.
    Body Language by Kelly Magee was our 2006 winner, judged by Dan Chaon.
    What Are You Afraid Of? by Michael Hyde, was our 2005 winner, judged by Sharon Oard Warner.
    Let's Do by Rebecca Meacham was our 2004 winner, judged by Jonis Agee. Let's Do was selected for the Spring 2005 Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers Program.
    Here Comes the Roar by Dave Shaw was our 2003 winner, judged by Marly Swick.
    The Stuntman's Daughter, a collection of stories by Alice Blanchard, was the 1996 winner of the Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Short Fiction. Ms. Blanchard went on to sign a lucrative contract with Bantam for her first novel, Darkness Peering.
     
     Send entries to:  Laura Kopchick, General Editor
    Katherine Anne Porter Contest / English Department
    University of Texas at Arlington / 203 Carlisle Hall, Box 19035
    Arlington, TX 76019

    Fantastic Texas and Lou Antonelli

    Lou Antonelli finds Texas to be Fantastic for science fiction and related genres.  Try his sites at
     
    Fantastic Texas
     
    This way to Texas

    A Senator's Bibliographical Flow

    Should you wish to notice what U.S. senators allow to flow from their offices on a regular basis, check the below links from John Cornyn's office under the "For the Press" button.
     
     
     

    East Texas Book Fest

    East Texas Book Fest

    Septembe 25, 2009  10:00-6:00

    Ornelas Acitivity Center -

    Tyler

     

     

    Are you a published author?   Do you want to display and sell your books to a book-loving audience in a fabulous venue?   Would you like to be a part of the first book festival in East Texas to honor and celebrate books, authors, reading and libraries?

     

    Save the date for the first ever East Texas Book Fest, set for Friday, September 25 in Tyler, Texas.
     
    You are invited to apply to participate by completing and the  registration form and returning it along with registration fee by September 1. 
     

    If you have questions or need more information –

    Please call 903-597-9111

    and leave a message for East Texas Book Fest.

     
    $20 for space reservation but free to the attending public
     
    Chief sponsors of the event are the Muntz Library at The University of Texas at Tyler and Smith County's public libraries (SALT).
    Spaces are limited, so please respond quickly.

    Monday, June 29, 2009

    Beautiful Photography - Best of Texas

    the Best of Texas group icon   Ok.  I've been keeping a secret.  One method I use to freshen my mind (also called an open barn by some), is to open an RSS feed I have for a special Flickr account.  Flickr, as you probably already know, is a major photographic storage site, a really big buncha pics.  Well, some are good, others are great.  One of the sites is called BEST OF TEXAS where a group of 500 excellent photographers contribute, or pool, their images.  Membership is restricted.  I wanted to see their images regularly so I opened a free Flickr account and started an RSS feed.  Now, when I'm lethargic from a week of 100 degree temps or a month of snow drifts, I just open my RSS feed list and click the "Best of Texas."  The images are not for your casual use; most of the photographers are professional and expect a bit of renumeration for their work.  But just seeing the images re-charges my batteries.  See more at
     

    Sunday, June 28, 2009

    Paul D. Ruffin - Texas Poet Laureate - 2009

        Paul D. Ruffin is the current Texas Poet Laureate.  He is the Texas State University System Regents' Professor and Distinguished Professor of English at Sam Houston State University.  At SHSU, Ruffin founded and still serves as editor-in-chief of the Texas Review, an international literary journal, and he founded and serves as editor of the literary book press, the Texas Review Press
    Ruffin's written about a thousand works, most of which are poetry, but also includes some novels, short stories, and essays.  See http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_pdr/travelpublicity.pdf for a sampler.  And he collected some awards along the way.  Texas is advantaged by his presence.  His critical attention paid to William Goyen, a fine Texas author now gone, is keenly appreciated.
     
    Originally from Alabama, he has written an autobiographical work, "Growing Up in Mississippi Poor and White But Not Quite Trash," which will be interesting reading when it's published.  For more about Ruffin go to http://www.pauldruffin.com/page2.html
    For a list of our poets laureate go to http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/ref/abouttx/poets.html

    Wednesday, June 17, 2009

    Color of Lighting - Jiles

    Paulette Jiles new novel, "The Color of Lightning" enjoys a review in the New York Times.
     
    "HOW THE WEST WAS WON"
    Published: April 10, 2009
    The review begins:  "The hero of Paulette Jiles's third novel is a historical figure, a freed slave whose journey into the Texas Panhandle to rescue his wife and children — abducted not by slave traders but by Indians — derives from oral histories supported by a few traces of documentation. The novel begins in 1863 and ends in 1871, a few years before the local Indians were subdued and confined to reservations, and the great southern buffalo herd was annihilated, forever changing the land."

    Judy Alter on Texas Small Presses

    Judy Alter on "Texas' small publishing houses feel the pinch of a slow economy" from the Dallas Morning News, April 19, 2009.  She begins her considerations as below, on three notable publishers:  Wings Press, Cinco Puntos Press, and Blooming Tree Press.
     
    "The drumbeat of bad news from New York publishers, including declining sales and layoffs, has been constant this year. But what about small independent publishers in Texas? For the most part, they feel the pain, too.
    Wings Press in San Antonio was founded in 1975 by Joanie Whitebird and Joseph F. Lomax. When they died, the mantle of publisher fell on Bryce Milligan, who runs the press as a one-man operation: publisher, editor and designer. The press publishes multicultural books, chapbooks (small book or pamphlets), CDs, DVDs and broadsides."
    Read more at

    Tuesday, June 16, 2009

    Texas Poet Laureate - Morton - 2010

    Karla Morton Karla Morton - Future Texas Poet Laureate of 2010
     
    This Denton poet has published in a variety of journals, including Southwest American Literature, descant, Amarillo Bay, Concho River Review and the annual Texas Poetry Calendar. 
    She authored the volume Wee Cowrin" Timorous Beastie.  She reads widely in public events and has been taped for some television.  This Aggie graduate is married and has a couple of teenagers.
     
    See her at
     
    Michael Price is telling business leaders in Fort Worth about Morton elevation.
     
    Morton next year in 2010 will replace Paul Ruffin the 2009 Laureat (see posting on June 28 for Ruffin.

    Cool Jazz, Western Literature, and Wind Power

    At Texas Tech just last week amid a conference on wind turbines (there's a lotta hot air in West Texas), one presentation had an unusual title by Michael Borshuk, Texas Tech University, Department of English,
     
    Cool Jazz, Western Literature, and Wind Power: A Metaphor for Energy

    Pluma Fronteriza

    Out of the El Paso region comes "Chicano Literature Latino Literature - Pluma Fronteriza," a blog on the title's topic.
     

    Self-described as:  "Raza Literature from the Borderlands. Raza Literature from Cd. Juarez, Las Cruces, and El Paso. Chicano Writers. Chicana Writers. "Pluma Fronteriza" has become one of the most widley distributed publications in the history of Chicana(o) literature. Founded in 1999, PF showcases Chicano(a) and Latino(a) writers from the El Paso, TX/Cd. Juarez, Chih, Mex/Las Cruces, NM tri-state region. This region has created the largest geographic niche in the genre."

     
    Some previous posts include

            A $ for your food thoughts

            Haylee Landford has an interesting scribbler's outlet and maybe a way to make a few bucks or enhance her real estate role.  Writing for selected webpages, Haylee has three items of related interest on separate sites that currently were pulled in though my RSS feeds.  See these brief essays
             
             

            Thursday, May 28, 2009

            DPL Music Conference and webliography

            The Bennett Law Office blog passes along information on Dallas Public Library's one-day "Texas Music Mini-Conference: History of Texas Music" on May 30.  Maybe of more strategic value for those not able to attend is the included webliography on selected music sites.
             

            Texas Mystery Month in May

            Texas Mystery Month is May.  Visit Texas Mystery Authors at http://www.texasmysteryauthors.net/curious.htm

            The Road movie - Cormac McCarthy

            Cormac McCarthy's The Road as a movie will be released in October 2009.  See the official trailer at
            The movie's inspriation came to McCarthy, according to his interview with Oprah, one night while in an El Paso hotel, as his son slept nearby.

            See the Sites - THC - Blogging for Historical Sites

                Recently the Texas Historical Commission began a blog "See the Sites."  The postings' focus on particular historical sites, with some attention to current events at those.  The narrative is supplmented with colorful photos.  And there's a touch of experimentation with embedding video.  Over a dozen postings so far.
             
            See the Sites:  telling the real stories at the real places of Texas: From western forts to Victorian mansions and pivotal battlegrounds, the Texas Historical Commission's 20 state historic sites exemplify a breadth of Texas history. Come explore the real stories at the real places.

            Thursday, May 21, 2009

            Light Cummins - Texas State Historian

            Dr. Light T. Cummins will succeed Dr. Frank Jesus de la Teja as the official Texas State Historian.  The term is two years.
             
            Congratulations!
            Cummins holds the Guy M. Bryan Chair of American History at Austin College, where he is a Professor of History and has been a member of the faculty since 1978. A 1946 native Texan reared in San Antonio, he received his Ph.D. from Tulane University. He is a Borderlands specialist.  He has been a Fulbright Scholar to Spain and is the author of several books, including:
          • A Guide to the History of Louisiana (1982)
          • A Guide to the History of Texas (1988)
          • Texas: A Political History (1990)
          • Spanish Observers and the American Revolution (1992)
          • Louisiana: A History 4th Edition (2001)
          • Austin College: A Sesquicentennial History (1999)
          • Emily Austin of Texas: Sister to an Empire (2008)
          • United States History to 1877 (2006)
          •  
            Other awards have included
            Appointment to the Stephen F. Austin Bicentennial Committee
            Appointment as director of the Center for Southwestern and Mexican Studies
            Becoming an Associate of the Danforth Foundation
            Becoming a Fellow of the Texas State Historical Association
            Becoming a Minnie Stevens Piper Professor.
            Receiving the Premio de España y America by King Juan Carlos I of Spain for his scholarly research dealing with the history of Spain and the United States
            Becoming a Kentucky Colonel for his work on the Mississippi Valley
            Receiving the Francisco Bouligny Prize for his publications dealing with Spanish colonial Louisiana 
            See More at
             

            Sunday, May 10, 2009

            Blessed Bud Shrake Died

            It's an odd phrase, "Bud Shrake Died." 
            Seems so out of context.  Life is steaming all around us, Bud should be here.  But, Bud Shrake died, at age 77 in Austin on Friday May 8.  Born in Fort Worth in 1931, beginning as a writer for his high school newspaper and getting educated at TCU, Edwin went from being Fort Worth Press police beat writer to a remarkable career in sports journalism (Texas newpapers and Sports Illustrated), novels (9 of his 10 set in Texas), co-authoring a best-selling book on golf (Harvey Penick's Little Red Book), co-biographer (Willie Nelson and Barry Switzer), magazine essays (e.g., Texas Monthly, Harpers), screenwriter (one being Tom Horn, 1981) and all sorts of other paperwork.
            I first read Shrake's Strange Peaches while in Library School in the 1970's and subsequently fell under the spell of Blessed McGill.  His early literary companions were often Gary Cartwright, Billy Lee Brammer, Dan Jenkins, and Peter Gent with whom he stirred the pot and drank at the well of Texas literature.  But his influence was broad.  He will be buried in the Texas State Cemetery near Ann Richards.
            Shrake's partial bibliography includes

            Blood Reckoning (1962)

            But Not For Love (1964)

            Blessed McGill (1968)

            Strange Peaches (1972)

            Peter Arbiter (1973)

            Limo (1976, with Dan Jenkins)

            Night Never Falls (1987)

            Willie: An Autobiography (1988)

            Bootlegger's Boy (1990) (the Switzer biography)

            Harvey Penick's Little Red Book (1992)

            The Borderland: A Novel of Texas (2000)

            Billy Boy (2001)

            Custer's Brother's Horse (2007)

             

            An anthology, Land of the Permanent Wave, An Edwin "Bud" Shrake Reader, was published in 2008 by UT Press.  Shrake introduces himself there in an introduction - revealingly as usual.

            His papers are at Texas State University in the Southwestern Writers Collection

            http://alkek.library.txstate.edu/swwc/archives/writers/shrake.html

            View a Texas Monthly Talks interview collected in Will's Texana Channel Playlist of "Authors" at http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=FEDACCD3C2E25DAA

             

            Wednesday, May 06, 2009

            Secession and Division Questions

            The fascinating secession question and its often corollary division question are decidedly interesting to Texans. 
            The recent discussion followed Rick Perry's reviving the "issue" of Texas secession at the time of annexation.  See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5xTxcFA398
            The following two blogs begin with opposite views by the blog hosts, but the truly invigorating numerous Comments in both lead you through a remarkable discussion of Texas AND American history, philosophy, politics, constitutional law - and in some cases international law. 
            There are some cogencies, some pot-shots, some outright misleadings, some sublime observations - much of which is historially backed up by the various authors. 
            If you are not completely hide-bound to ignorance (and hence stupid by definiton) both trains of discussions will teach you something, even if you're reluctant.
             
                Ed Darrell - Millard Fillmore's Bathtub
             
            Link to Simon-Jester.org   Professor Bernardo de la Paz - I Am Simon Jester
             
             
             
            And you have views expressed in a Bryan-College Station newpaper and an Austin newspaper. 
             
            The Eagle - Your digital news leader 
             
             
             
             
             
             
            Postcards
             
            But Wait, There's More. Check out the rest of this issue.  
             
            Having begun this posting with Gov. Perry, you may wish to consider another view from an up-coming issue in the Texas Observer.
             
             
             
             

            Saturday, May 02, 2009

            North Texas Book Festival Book Awards

             
            2009 NTBF BOOK AWARD FINALISTS
            General Trade
            Book
            (Fiction)
            Brooklyn and Braden
            by Keri Diane Fry

            Evacuation Plan
            by Joe M. O'Connell
            Magnolia Moon,
            Texas Sage

            by Janice Rose
            General Trade
            Book
            (Non-Fiction)
            One Day As A Lion
            by Ronnie D. Foster
            A Place to
            Be Someone

            by Shirley
            Gordon Jackson
            From Guns to Gavels
            by Bill Neal


            Children's
            Book
            (Fiction/Nonfiction)
            My Dog Don't Bite
            by R. Wayne Edwards
            ill. R. Wayne Edwards
            Birth of the Fifth Sun
            by Jo Harper,
            ill. Irma Martinez Sizer
            Arrowhead's
            Lost Hoard

            by Hazel Spire
            And the winners are listed at Mike Merschal's Book Blog at the Dallas Morning News.  Those journalists get informaltion before its posted sometimes.

            Western Writers Spur Awards

            Western Writers of American announces its 2009 awards.
            or

            Texas Tech University Press Awards

            Texas Tech University Press
             
             

            Mike Kearby and Hypocrisy of Culture

            Texana Mike Kearby, Spur winning novelist of the Free Parks trilogy, offers an insightful article on the "Hypocrisy of Culture" at Isnare.  Kearby's novels' plots are set in Texas' multi-cultural frontier times after the Civil War.