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Texas Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Texas
Caprock Canyonlands: Journeys into the Heart of the Southern Plains (M K Brown Range Life Series)
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Texas Pr (1990-07)
Author: Dan L. Flores
List price: $24.95
Used price: $11.83
Collectible price: $119.00

Average review score:

America's missing National Park -- a lament and a dream
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-21
That's the driving spirit behind this wonderful book -- Texas' missing National Park.

At one time, in the early 1930s, the National Park Service was looking at a national park at least 150,000 acres, and as much as 1 million acres, for Texas' Panhandle caprock. That's right, 1 million acres -- 1,600 square miles or so.

What happened? Don't blame the Depression; the NPS bought land in Texas at the tail end of the Depression to create Big Bend.

Lack of political will and a dime-store solution on the cheap are what happened.

After helping the state of Texas create Palo Duro Canyon State Park -- around 15,000 acres, not 150,000, let alone 1 million -- the NPS simply didn't carry that through. So all we have today is Palo Duro and another dime-sized state park, Caprock Canyons (Copper Breaks is not a canyon, per se, and it's not in the Caprock).

Flores, who once had a rough-it/hippie house in Yellow House Canyon, on one of the Caprock forks of the Brazos River, knows this land intimately and personally -- including the vast majority of the Caprock still in private hands.

Read this intimate account of what many of you may be missing who haven't visited either of the two state parks in Texas' Panhandle, and for those of you who have been to Palo Duro but not explored the rest of the Caprock, see what could have been -- and what Flores dreams still could be.

Deep canyons and deep thoughts-more than a geology book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-07
I paid over-due fines on this book twice at the Austin library...I wouldn't return it until I was finished. It was worth it though. Flores writes in simple terms and speaks from the heart. This book educated me while causing me to reflect on my life...Imprinted DNA from old relatives...I've believed this for years.

very interested
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-14
it might not be fair to comment, but i haven't read this book. nevertheless i was flying to san francisco from miami the other day and as the pilot mentioned that we just passed over texico, nm i noticed one of the most arresting sights i have ever seen from a plane.

seemingly endless plains, farmed into a quilted patchwork of green squares and circles, abruptly dissolved into a brownish red fractal universe.

at 34.946 north 103.438 west is one of the most striking features. you can check it out online at the terraserver or on any map program. of course they could never do justice to what it really looks like. i've been obsessing over this area for a few days now, although i hope it'll pass before i crank out bucks for yet another book i don't really need.

Deep canyons and deep thoughts-more than a geology book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-07
I paid over-due fines on this book twice at the Austin library...I wouldn't return it until I was finished. It was worth it though. Flores writes in simple terms and speaks from the heart. This book educated me while causing me to reflect on my life...Imprinted DNA from old relatives...I've believed this for years.

Hidden treasures
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-02
Having lived in the Caprock area of Texas for a few years I never knew what history and hidden geography were just beyond the flat, flat plain across the highway! After reading this book I must return to the Caprock to discover these things on my own! There is much beyond the state parks that Texans should claim as a part of their heritage and strive to better understand. Get this book and see if you don't agree!

Texas
Chasing Charlie
Published in Paperback by Chivers (2002-06)
Author: Kathy Carmichael
List price:

Average review score:

Gotta love this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-01
Chasing Charlie is a fabulous romantic comedy with characters I didn't want to leave when I finished the book. I look forward to reading more by this author.

Wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-18
This was a great first book for Kathy! It was entertaining, funny, and a quick read. Living in Dallas, I could really relate to some of the descriptions of the places. It's a great by the pool/on the beach book or a pick-me-up after a hard day.

Great fun!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-15
This is a wonderful light-hearted romance. The characters really pull you into the story. Its so much fun you won't want to put it down!

Awesome story! A keeper!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-09
Davis Murphy's mother would never marry Jim and move with her love to Japan until she was sure her son had settled down. Davis told Jim he had decided to have someone pretend to be his fiancée for his mother's sake. He chose Charlie Nelson, a librarian. It took some work, but she agreed to the temporary arrangement.

Charlie just wanted to prove she could take a risk. But buying that sexy red dress caused chaos! She agreed to act the fiancée for only one night! But Davis's mother, Ellen, was so easy to love and Charlie had soon agreed to seeing Ellen the next night. The well-meant lie became a large tangle as more and more people became involved.

Jim, seeing that the couple really belonged together, began making waves. He included Charlie's two ranch brothers. Davis began to admit his feelings for Charlie, but Charlie refused to even consider Davis as a possible real husband! She had lived her entire life on the ranch with her brothers. She knew the dangers of rodeos! Since Davis intended to become a cowboy, they had no future together.

***** To me, Charlotte was more of an Imp than an Elf. Both main characters were stubborn as mules and as immovable as boulders! But even heavy boulders can be forced into motion, as author, Kathy Carmichael, proves within these pages!

This story was pure delight! Full of places in which I could not stop my chuckling from becoming audible! Highly recommended reading! *****

Lots of Fun!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-06
Ms. Carmichael has written a fun, entertaining book. Her characters are likeable and enjoyable. Her humor is witty and on the subtle side. The book is "sweet" with no sex, so would be good for the younger romance reader. I am looking forward to reading more by her!

Texas
The Chicken Ranch: The True Story of the Best Little Whorehouse in Texas
Published in Paperback by Oak Tree Pubns (1982-06)
Author: Jan Hutson
List price: $5.95
Used price: $6.50
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

I loved it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-09
I first read this book when it was published, while I was in high school and dating Jan's son. She inscribed a copy for my father, and it has fallen into my hands again with his passing. Dad had alluded to the infamous "Chicken Ranch," but I never knew much about it until I read the book. Jan's writing style is informative yet fluid; the entire book can be read in one sitting -- and, in fact, that's exactly how I read it, completely engrossed and unaware of time passing. I'm happy to see the book is back in print.

The Chicken Ranch: The True Story of the Best Little Whoreho
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-27
The story of the Ranch is pretty well accurite... of course there are thing that could be ... uh expounded upon. I wonder if the author talked to the last Madame to run the ranch? I was in the ranch the day it closed & I'm sure Miss Edna could tell some more true stories of the Chicken Ranch. I know. She a relative of mine & is alive and well.

I loved this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-28

This is a great little book. I'm delighted that it is back in print. It is the story which led to the movie, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," a great movie with Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds.

But, the book is nothing like the movie! It's even better. In the first place, it is history, not fiction. This is the story of the oldest continuously operating brothel in Texas. It first opened for business in 1844, in La Grange, Texas, where it became an institution which the community not only tolerated, but looked at with a certain pride.

The Chicken Ranch was protected by a succession of sheriffs, who, according to the author, did so out of the goodness of their hearts, and because the Chicken Ranch was a source of invaluable intelligence into criminal activities in the county.

The author, Jan Hutson, who moved to Texas when she married, and is intensely interested in Texas history, writes from a knowledgeable and sympathetic viewpoint.

Hutson is extremely hard on the TV personality, Marvin Zindler, whose efforts she credits for shutting the famous old house down. She portrays him as a toupee wearing, sensation-seeking "jerk" who went on a vendetta against the Chicken Ranch, seeking personal aggrandizement by making it a cause celebre.

"Busting sixteen obscure whores from Houston was not going to grab any headlines. But the Chicken Ranch was not obscure; it was a name familiar to every schoolboy in Texas. The house was doomed because its public relations had worked too well."(Page 109)

This is a great little book. This new edition is a reprint and virtually identical, but of far better quality and less expensive than the first edition.

The book is full of chuckles, and is a delight to read. I recommend it highly.

Joseph Pierre

This is a great little book.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-05

This is the story of the longest continually operating brothel in the state of Texas

It is the story which led to the movie, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," a great movie with Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds.

But, the book is even better than the movie. It is a factual account, rather than a fictionalized version, as was the movie. The Chicken Ranch first opened for business in 1844, in La Grange, Texas, where it became an institution which the community not only tolerated, but looked at with a certain local pride, resisting all out-of-town efforts to close it down.

It was protected by a succession of sheriffs, who, supposedly, did so out of the goodness of their hearts, and because the Chicken Ranch was a source of invaluable intelligence, used to control criminal activities in the county.

The author, Jan Hutson, writes from a knowledgeable viewpoint, having moved to Texas upon her marriage, where she developed an intense interest in local history.

Hutson is extremely hard on the TV personality whose efforts she credits for shutting the famous old house down. She portrays him as a toupee wearing, sensation-seeking "jerk" who went on a vendetta against the Chicken Ranch, seeking personal aggrandizement by making it a cause celebre.

"Busting sixteen obscure whores from Houston was not going to grab any headlines. But the Chicken Ranch was not obscure; it was a name familiar to every schoolboy in Texas. The house was doomed because its public relations had worked too well." (Page 109)

This is a great little book. It is full of chuckles. You won't be able to put it down.

Joseph Pierre,

This is a great little book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-26

It's too bad this book is out-of-print. It's a dandy. Maybe you can get a copy through Amazon's rare and out-of-print service. It is the story which led to the movie, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," a great movie with Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds.

But, the book is nothing like the movie! It's even better. This is the story of the oldest continuously operating whorehouse in Texas. It first opened for business in 1844, in La Grange, Texas, where it became an institution which the community not only tolerated, but looked at with a certain pride.

It was protected by a succession of sheriffs, who, supposedly, did so out of the goodness of their hearts, and because the Chicken Ranch was a source of invaluable intelligence into criminal activities in the county.

The author, Jan Hutson, seems to write from a knowledgeable--even intimate--viewpoint. She says in her Acknowledgements that she could not have written it without her husband's "enthusiasm in humoring my eccentricities" and her children's patience and pride.

Hutson is extremely hard on the TV personality, Marvin Zindler, whose efforts she credits for shutting the famous old whorehouse down.

She portrays him as a toupee wearing, sensation-seeking "jerk" who went on a vendetta against the Chicken Ranch, seeking personal aggrandizement by making it a cause celebre.

"Busting sixteen obscure whores from Houston was not going to grab any headlines. But the Chicken Ranch was not obscure; it was a name familiar to every schoolboy in Texas. The house was doomed because its public relations had worked too well." (Page 109)

This is a great little book. If you can get hold of a copy, you will not be able to put it down.

Joseph Pierre,
Author of THE ROAD TO DAMASCUS: Our Journey Through Eternity

Texas
Children of the Dust: An Okie Family Story (Plains Histories) (Plains Histories)
Published in Hardcover by Texas Tech University Press (2006-10-06)
Author: Betty Grant Henshaw
List price: $29.95
New price: $18.83
Used price: $6.49
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

A profound story of salt-of-the-earth people proudly doing their best to survive
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-11
A finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award, Children of the Dust: An Okie Family Story is the personal memoir of author Betty Grant Henshaw, who was born into a large family of tenant farmers in Oklahoma during the terrible time of the Dust Bowl. Her father, Bill, worked himself to exhaustion striving to provide for his wife and nine children; eventually his family had to migrate to California, where he worked in the fields in hundred-degree heat. Yet he instilled respect for hard work in his children, and kept family solidarity through trying times. Highly recommended as a powerful and profound story of salt-of-the-earth people proudly doing their best to survive.

CHILDREN OF THE DUST: AN OKIE FAMILY STORY
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-16
VERY WELL WRITTEEN. BRING THAT TIME BACK TO LIFE.

Compelling narative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-09
This book is a joy to read. It is a story so intimately told that one feels a kindred spirit with the author and her family. Many of us who lived through the great depression and life in the west can share some of her memories, and we can relive many of the experiences in our own childhoods.
I highly recommend this book.
Audrey DeMott

Heartfelt Book about a Difficult Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-27
This book really brings to life what it meant to be a young girl growing up in Oklahoma during the dust bowl. The struggles the family goes through and survives as the father tries to make a living as a sharecropper are fascinating. This was a world of real poverty but also great family love. Reading a history of this time through one family's experiences is a great story.

Give author credit for ten years of hard work.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-23
Credit should be given to the author for her ten years of work. Betty Grant Henshaw is the Author and should get the credit for writing this wonderful book. Sandra Jean Scofield helped her edit the book and was a great help, but is in no way the author. Betty Henshaw lived this book and wrote it.
This is a wonderful story of a large loving family who was poor but was rich with love and devotion. It is a touching story.

Texas
The Comancheria: A Kill Line
Published in Paperback by Bald Cypress Pr (2001-10)
Author: B. Ray Mize
List price: $12.95
New price: $1.50
Used price: $0.05
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

The Comancheria: A Kill Line
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-14
A fast-paced read. This book has all the elements; strong moral characters, action, humor and the ever-present sense that the guys in the white hats will always ride in to save the day! Can't ask for more than that! Put this book on your Christmas list!

Bruce and Susan Robinson
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-14
We received the book as a gift. Thought it wouldn't be our type of book, but read it anyway. Couldn't put the book down and we both finished it in one day. Bought eight copies for gifts. Terrific non-stop action. Can't wait for his next book.

If you love to read, you'll love this one!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Clive Cussler made me adore Dirk Pitt, but Ray Mize made me love Reid Matthews. And how can you write about a strong man without a female to counterbalance him? This book had all the good stuff that kept me turning the pages. Even the dogs, Lips and Feet, were incredibly well developed characters! If you like to snuggle down with a good book, this is the one!

Gripping!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-14
A Kill Line grabs you on the first page and keeps you in suspense through out the entire book. The author makes it easy to identify with the characters immediately. Do not start the book before bed time because you won't be able to put it down before it is finished!!!!!

Superbly crafted and thoroughly entertaining
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-11
Author B. Ray Mize debut novel, The Comancheria: A Kill Line is a rapidly paced adventure novel that plays out on a modern Texas ranch and on the streets of New Orleans. The reader is quickly engaged with a series of memorable characters that range from Native Americans, Cajuns, and cowboys, to thugs and career women. The story is superbly crafted and thoroughly entertaining. The Comancheria is one of that class of novels that are so easy to pick up and so hard to put down!

Texas
Coronado's Children: Tales of Lost Mines and Buried Treasures of the Southwest (Barker Texas History Center Series)
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (1978)
Author: J. Frank Dobie
List price: $18.95
New price: $6.89
Used price: $3.98
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

Another classic from Dobie
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-14
Not at the level for me of Tales of Old-time Texas but still an excellent collection of stories from J. Frank Dobie. This collection is focused, as the title should tell you, on buried treasure, treasure maps and things of that nature. The book is still a joy to read and I don't understand why more of the country doesn't know about Mr. Dobie.

A Fine Book which Improves With Each Reading
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-29
The author, a premier folklorist from Texas, writes about the Southwest and the type of treasure with which nature consoles the seeker -- "shadows for want of substantials." Unlike Coronado, the author seeks the treasure that emanates from the heart and mind. This is a fine book written seven decades ago and improves with each reading.

Dobie talks about this land of shadows where we meet Alice Henderson, who faced down fifty cow thieves; Don Milton Favor, who built his own fort while making treaties with hostile Indians; and Cheetwah, a mystic Indian chief who vanished into the mountains to keep vigil over hidden treasures. These and other characters spring from the pages of Dobie's book with a vigor and purpose that makes the heart sing.

The Texas of the Big Bend country is where Dobie's prose satisfies, "Outlandish pictures painted down the sides of caves by aborigines which no white man can now decipher...a jagged and gashed land where legend has placed a lost canyon, its broad floor carpeted with grass that is always green and watered by gushing springs, its palisaded walls imprisoning a herd of buffalo...somewhere in this land credulity has fixed a petrified forest with tree trunks seven hundred feet long."

The author claims, "After I hear a tale I do all I can to improve it," and this is an understatement. Readers who possess a sense of wonder will enjoy this book. History often cloaks personages with dusty trappings, stuffy sayings, and mixed motives so time has faded the awe that Drake, Cortez, Raleigh, and Coronado experienced. Dobie illuminates the wonder of the children of Coronado as they chase their dreams and draws us into their world of enchantment.

Francisco Coronado never found his golden riches or the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola during his time in the Southwest. When he returned in 1542, and told the truth about his barren search, he wasn't believed. One person who did believe said, "Granted he did not find the riches of which he had been told -- he found instead a place in which to search for them."

And the search continues. For centuries Coronado's vision of wealth has lured countless thousnads to the Southwest where tradition and myth have marked mountains, rivers, and ancient ruins with boundless treasures. This book follows long forgotten Spanihs trails, buffalo trails, cow trails, and areas where there are no trails as searchers dig for riches which eludes their grasp. Others, rather than searching, have sat and told stories of lost mines, buried treasure and of ghostly patrones who guard the treasures -- adding layers to the myths that abound in the land of Coronado.

This book lovingly describes Spanish influence and tradition on the Sountwest and combines a terrific cast of characters, interesting situations, and Dobie's unmatched skill at weaving a tale. The author's footnotes are at the end of the text and are filled with tales and legends of lost mines and treasures. There's an interesting section on the elaborate Code of Treasure Symbols used by the Spaniards. An excellent glossary of idioms used in the Southwest follows that section.

There is more to the American West than gunfighters, farmers, bankers, cowboys, and miners. The author has given us the realm of the dreamers.

A masterpiece of folklore
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-29
J. Frank Dobie was a folklorist of Texas and "Coronado's Children" may be his best and most famous book. He was born in 1888 and bridged the old west and modern times. CC was written in 1930 when many of the old timers, who knew how to spin a yarn, were still around. Dobie sought them out and recorded their stories of lost gold and buried treasure. He was also a serious scholar who rummaged through Spanish and American archives to give authenticity to his stories -- and he was not adverse to saddling up a horse and doing a little on-the-ground research.

"Coronado's Children" has inspired thousands of otherwise normal people to pick up a shovel and head off to some god-forsaken wasteland to dig in the ground looking for the "Lost San Saba Mine," the booty of pirate Jean Lafitte, or the $2 million the James boys supposedly buried in the Wichita mountains of Oklahoma. These are the kind of stories that dreams are made of -- and who knows? Some of them might be true.

Dobie has collected nineteen tales in CC and he tells them beautifully in prose that is conversational and colorful. He has enormous respect for the land and the Indians, the Mexicans, and the Anglos who live in the harsh, dry country of the southwest. An oft-used adjective to describe his stories is "magical" and so they are. "Coronado's Children" is an American classic.

Smallchief

Dobie Does it Best
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-15
Perhaps the best folklore book ever written about lost mines and buried treasure, caves full of gold bars, and Spanish silver. As in most of Dobie's writings, this is not straight history but Dobie's version of other people stories with a large dose of Dobie in all of them. A Texas classic.

one of my "ten best books"
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-24
I read this book 30 years ago. I am now 75, and I rank it as one of the most fascinating books of my lifetime. It opened up a whole world of places and things that are long gone, but which deserve to be remembered. I believe that I have since read almost everything that Frank Dobie has written, but believe this is still the best.

Texas
The Cotton Candy Catastrophe at the Texas State Fair
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (2004-09)
Author: Dotti Enderle
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.81
Used price: $10.52

Average review score:

Fun and original story with great illustrations
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-14
A great story by Dotti Enderle and a great tribute to Texas, where everything is bigger! The illustrations are eye-pleasing and my children laughed several times at the sheer silliness of this tale!

As much fun as the fair itself!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-18
As a long-time Texas State Fair goer, I'm thrilled to own such a fun book that is full of the flavor, adventure, and excitement of the Fair. Dotti Enderle does a wonderful job of creating a monstrous cotton-candy day for one boy and for everyone who reads this delightful book. The pictures are bright and sure to catch a child's attention. You can almost taste the cotton candy as you read!

Everything's bigger in Texas
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-07
In this tallest of tale tales, Enderle spins a story about some cotton candy that's spun out of control, gumming up the works at the Texas state fair. A great choice to read before a trip to the Midway, or to bring back memories after-the-fact. Be sure to have something sweet on hand while you read -- this book'll make your tummy rumble for a box of caramel corn or a plate of sugar-dusted fried dough. Put on your best twang for maximum read-aloud pleasure.

Lively and Funny
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-29
Whenever I get a picture book to review, it's always a team effort between myself and my 4-year-old daughter. About THE COTTON CANDY CATASTROPHE, she said, "It was fun and funny. And it had a haunted house that I want to go in. And I like how it got sillier and sillier because the cotton candy made more and more mess." I agree. This is a great tall-tale story of what can happen if you aren't careful with that fluffy pink stuff. The illustrations are a hoot, too -- full of fun -- I especially loved the chickens. And you'll even get a peek at Big Tex, the 52-foot-tall cowboy who really does greet visitors to the Texas State Fair. It's a great regional book and a fun read-aloud.

Cotton Candy Fun
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-04
I loved following Jake and his cotton candy through the Texas State Fair. Wish I'd been there to witness the commotion that followed. This is a delightful tale that children are sure to enjoy.

Texas
Dallas Doc: All the City and Country Critters in the Life of a Texas-style Vet
Published in Paperback by Bridgeline Books (1999-11-01)
Author: David Carlton
List price: $12.95
New price: $5.98
Used price: $3.48
Collectible price: $12.95

Average review score:

I loved this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-18
This was the greatest book ever.
I liked the stories cause they made me laugh and sad too.
I think it was a very good book

Great stories of people & animals.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-05
Dallas Doc is a great book of anecdotes about being a vet in Dallas/Texas. I enjoyed the stories a lot but was left wanting more substance, thus the 4 stars instead of 5.

However, if you like animals and the people who care for them you will like this book and the sequel, Texas Doc.

You'll want to keep it and read it again!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-07
Any human that is owned by any kind of city or country critter will really enjoy this book...it is filled with hilarious adventures and heart warming, tear jerking accounts of the daily life of a citified rural veterinarian, just trying to do the work he loves the best he can, and still maintain his sanity. This book has earned a 'keep it and read it again' spot right next to my collection of James Herriot's memoirs.

A Veterinarian for all animals
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-21
Heartwarming, heart tugging and funny--it's a perfect book for any animal lover. Think Cleveland Amory meets Baxter Black. More like James Herriot's writing than anything I ever read. A fun and easy-to-read collection of short stories that truly describes the life of a Texas veterinarian. I couldn't put it down!

A Must Read for All Animal Lovers at Heart
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-04
This is a wonderful book that is well written and easy to read. The author gives great insight into his life as a vet. Readers of all ages will find this book entertaining and captivating.

Texas
Diezmo, The: A Novel (.)
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin (2005-05-13)
Author: Rick Bass
List price: $22.00
New price: $4.98
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $22.00

Average review score:

My great great grandfather was in this expedition
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
I've always been fascinated by the story of the Mier Expedition. My great-great grandfather, Willis Coplan, was one of the survivors. The book is wrong on page 146, however, where it states that Willis, after escaping and then being caught, spent 20 years in captivity in Matamoros, withing sight of the Texas border. On the contrary, he was sent to Perote Castle. In his memoirs, he wrote that he was "glad to get back with the boys, with whom he had experienced so many hardships." His memoirs also contradict Rick Bass's description of the black bean incident, where Rick's characters are stoic and despondent. Willis, however, wrote that the men who drew the black beans joked about it. One said, "This beats raffling all to pieces," while another said, "Boys, I never failed in my life to draw a prize." It was the men who drew the white beans who grieved, and some of them offered to trade their white beans for black ones, but they had no takers.
Nevertheless, this is a wonderful novel. I'm grateful to Rick Bass for bringing to life a story that, for me, had almost become a fable. Thanks, Rick

Relentless
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-23
Bass recounts the story of a troop of sometimes reluctant, but always relentless men ostensibly fighting for their new nation of Texas. The historical incident, obscure to most of us, is well known to Texans, the retaliation for the Battle of San Jacinto. We come to know what drives some of them and the regrets of others. Mostly, we marvel at their capacity for survival. When everything is taken away from them; when they live day after day in toil and torture, infested with an army of lice and tested by disease after disease, they still have the ability to experience the small joy that comes with the minutest reprieve.

There is little joy in reading the book, though the author presents the story as well we could expect. Like castor oil, though, it may be good for us to see those so eager for war get their wish, then regret it for every minute of their lives.

You will be controlled by only the most civilized warfare...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-19
I was reluctant to continue after hearing some of the horrific deeds commited by the men who (after reading the dustjacket) I thought to be Texas heroes. But just as I was appalled I was mesmerized into reading throughout the night in hopes of learning how their fates played out. And as I write this just a few minutes later I am wondering how the survivors fared, the ones that were less critical to the story at hand but may have played a more powerful and less publicized role. Overall I recommend this to anyone with an interest in Texas...or history... or man in general.

An excellent historical review (the book, not the review)
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-19
I found this book to be an excellent historical novelation (or is it a novelation of a historic event)? Anyway, as someone who is familiar with Texas history, I still found much to admire about this novelisation (novelization?) of the Meir escapade, which I learned a lot about, in spite of my (supposed) knowledge of the story. It is made more interesting by the centering of the story on one fictional character, intermixed with real, historic figures. I would recommend the book highly to anyone wanting to learn about this tragic event in Texas history, as well as anyone wanting to read an exciting, bloody story in its own right.

Men will have war.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-30
An absorbing account, written with much foreshadowing of an old man looking back upon the foolishness and stupidity of war. Comparisons with BLOOD MERIDIAN are natural, and here the message is quite the same, that men are addicted to war, that there is no glory in it, that stupidity and violence will continue to prevail.

Bass structures his narrative on the historical memoirs left us, which were biased and conflicting, but perhaps, as Cormac McCarthy might say, the truth of what did not happen may be about as true as what can be documented, the memories of men being uncertain and biased.

Some of the characters and scenes are imagined, but some characters such as Thomas Jefferson Green and William Fisher are historical. There is violence and gore in here, but it is not laid on. The author has an eye for the telling detail, as in this paragraph describing the commanders planning the invasion into Mexico:

"They sat in a circle of mismatched chairs. Green and Somervell's chairs were turned backwards so that they straddled them like horses. They leaned forward in the chairs, resting the weight of their torsos against the backs, as if even here they intended to somehow charge into battle."

The prose is nothing like McCarthy, of course, but is sparkling and fresh and goes down like a clean drink of water. Typical Rick Bass prose. The title refers to the black bean lottery that Mexicans used to determine which prisoners were shot and which survived. This may seem too obscure for browsing bookbuyers, but the attractive dustjacket may encourage them to look more closely.

Rick Bass lists his sources on the Acknowledgments Page in the rear of the book, so as to alert scholars who hunger for more details. The author says that he wrote it as our troops were charging into Baghdad--suggesting that his emotions then may have influenced the book.

However he came to write it, I'm glad that he did. This book is short, just 208 pages, but exactly the length needed to tell the story of these soldiers of misfortune. It is a treasure. Bravo!

Texas
Don't Mess with Texas: The Story Behind the Legend
Published in Hardcover by Idea City Press (2006-09-01)
Authors: Tim McClure and Roy Spence
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.51
Used price: $4.99
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Good coffee table book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
I bought this book as a wedding present for a couple from Texas that have relocated to Chicago. Up north, they think the "Don't mess with Texas" campaign is about not messing with Texans. I just thought it was a great way of showing what the campaign was really about to all of their visiting Chicago friends. It has great photos with all the Texan icons.

I miss Texas
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-19
This is a great book for people who are living in various parts of the country and miss Texas. Sold as a coffee table book, it's a great gift idea, providing out-of-staters with the chance to bring some of Texas home to them. The famous celebrities that appear on the pages helped to establish the campaign, further contributing to its good standing. This book serves as a reminder to Texans of just how unique the state of Texas really is. Texans are known for possessing an immense amount of pride for their state, and the excerpts in this book help to explain and reveal exactly why Texans feel this way.

A great advertising book, not just for Texans!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-19
I am an art and photography store owner in Hartford, CT, and I was so thrilled to see this book on Amazon! The slogan just recently won an advertising competition from Madison Avenue, and is now in the Advertising Hall of Fame. I love this book because it really gives a concise but powerful retelling of the campaign. Just like the Absolut Book (about Absolut Vodka) and the several books about the milk mustache campaign, this book retells the birth and subsequent fame of the advertising campaign, and how many different tacts and approaches the firm took. Plus, it has some great pictures and examples from commercials with celebrities and the different ways the slogan caught on. Really a must have book for advertising kids everywhere, as well as artists who are interested in commercializing their work.

Interesting history of the infamous slogan
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-17
Don't Mess With Texas gave a very interesting explanation of the history of the slogan. I think that everyone has heard the slogan, Don't mess with Texas. According to the book, the publication is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the famous anti-litter campaign. Considering it's success I think that the campaign is definitely deserving of a book in it's honor. When you start reading you begin to realize how long this slogan has been around and it brings back almost hilarious memories of old commercials and the different faces of the campaign. How many anti-litter campaign have had the faces of legends like Warren Moon, Jerry Jeff Walker, Willie Nelson, George Foreman , and Leann Rimes. This book encompasses alot of the values that we as Texans hold important and shoot, it looks great as a coffee table book. I would reccomend it to any one looking to explore an interesting story and piece of Texas history turned pop culture.

Everything is Bigger in Texas
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-17
As an advertising executive, the "Don't Mess With Texas" campaign is, for me, the stuff legends are made of. It was the biggest, longest-running, and most successful public service advertisement in advertising history. It's really quite astounding that a local, pro-environment campaign picked up SO much momentum and even became an important part of American pop-culture. Tim McClure and Roy Spence do an outstanding job of telling their reader everything he/she wants to know about the campaign...and then some! Everything is there--from the first seeds of the idea to the last fully developed commercial (with, of course, lots of celebrity appearances, close-calls, budgeting issues, and interesting stories in between). This is a great book. If you're interested in advertising or Texas at all, it will entertain you.


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