Testing, Testing
Dan Jenkins and Bud Shrake find the Limo scene semi-amusing.
Dan Jenkins and Bud Shrake find the Limo scene semi-amusing.
Domestic bliss has seen better days than it sees in Shelby Hearon’s new novel.
Why the best years of our lives weren’t.
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's latest book "The Final Days" is just too much hocus-pocus.
Start fooling around with Mother Earth and you end up getting accused of rape.
America and Texas: past and present.
Peter Passel and Rollo May help those who help themselves.
Elmer Wayne Henley is neither safe nor sorry.
Spiritual desolation in Crawford’s The Backslider; spiritual warfare in Naipaul’s Guerrillas.
T for Texas, T for Tennessee Williams’ autobiography, and T for terrible.
When a noted American humorist retired to Alpine, the joke was on him.
East Texas author William Goyen was more at home in the Fifties.
Donald Barthelme wrote a novel about you and it’s so bad.
World War II the way it really was.
Larry McMurtry brings his Texas odyssey to an end.
Can college athletics survive? Can short stories?
Does crime pay?
Peter Matthiessen writes of men pursuing a dying profession and Philip Roth pursues his critics.
Frederick Exley shows how to get too much of a good thing.
Exploring the heavy price of Empire.
Coupling takes many forms, as John Updike and Shelby Hearon can tell you.
Two books on why you can’t go home again.
Two well-known authors prove that knowing the subject matter doesn’t necessarily guarantee a good book.
Bringing back the Ghost of Christmas Past.
A look at new work from Larry King, Ronnie Dugger, and Edwin Shrake.
Recently at a banquet at the Sheraton-Fort Worth, the Texas Institute of Letters announced its 1973 awards for literary excellence. Here are the winners:. . . The Carr P. Collins Award for the best nonfiction book: Lewis L. Gould for Progressives and Prohibitionists, Texas Democrats in the Wilson Era.. .
PEYTON PLACE COMES TO DALLAS Bill Peyton’s antiques, ranging from the most elaborate Louis XIV or Napoleonic pieces to funky wine presses, Coca-Cola mirrors, church pulpits, and pump organs, come from all over Europe in 40-foot containers, or from estates in Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. For 15 years he has
Our reviewer, whose capacity for punishment is apparently boundless, reports on ten best-selling paperback books.
Our well meaning volunteer other meets up with some hard-nosed realists in the public schools.
Some recommendations on what to do, see and buy this month.
Some recommendations on what to do, see and buy this month.
The Real ThingWhile billows of smoke encircle the Holmes Road dump, the City of Houston atones somewhat for its ecological sins by its production of Hou-Actinite, a remarkable 100 per cent organic fertilizer which is recycled at the Northside Waste Water Control Facility from city waste water and raw sewage.
Turn off the T.V. and read a spell. These books are fun.
About the AuthorDebbie Deepsheet Takes a Dive, by Mary Margaret WisheyMISS WISHLEY LIVES IN NICE ‘n Rustic, Connecticut, with a pet ‘coon and her two nuns. She is presently at work on the third volume of the Debbie Deepsheet trilogy, titled Debbie Deepsheet, Astronaut. Miss Wishey hopes that the story