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

Texas
Spirits Of Texas And New England
Published in Paperback by Fine Tooth Press L.L.C. (2004-08-31)
Author: Oscar De Los Santos
List price: $14.99
New price: $10.68
Used price: $11.15

Average review score:

Spirits of Texas and New England
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-09
This book had me gripped from the first paragraph. It is very interesting and well written. I am very interested in the paranormal and this book is a wonderful find for me. I highly recommend this book to everyone. You will find it very hard to put the book down once you start reading.

Boo!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-03
SPIRITS OF TEXAS AND NEW ENGLAND reads like good conversation! De Los Santos enters the realm of the paranormal with an absorbing collection of real-life stories that make readers feel as if they are sitting listening to an exceptional storyteller. The stories retold by De Los Santos are engaging and full of truthful twists of human nature and show that when in the face of the paranormal, we often become quivering masses of uncertainty. In addition, these stories demonstrate that regardless of time, gender and geography or the circumstances of contact with the supernatural, people's experiences of being human are very much alike. The family members provide some of the liveliest and most vivid stories and De Los Santos includes helpful explanations of paranormal activity. He's a writer with insight and scope.

Personal, Poigant, and Compelling
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-24
I recommend Spirits of Texas and New England for several reasons. First off, De Los Santos documents the supernatural experiences of himself, his family, students, and friends. The personal experiences make for a compellingly intimate read that is assured to offer the reader paranormal cases that he or she has not heard. Secondly, unlike other books that I've read on the subject, this work offers explanations on recurrent supernatural themes. Take for example De Los Santos' hypothesis that adolescents encounter ghosts more frequently than adults because their emerging sexuality lowers their defense to other entities and also endows them with an increased awareness of a spirit's presence.

To sum up, what I love most Spirits of Texas and New England is that it's simultaneously elucidating and relatable. It contains everything from everyday ghosts, to inner voices, psychic knowledge, phantom phone calls, astral projection, extraterrestrials, and possession. This is a varied and wonderful book. Highly recommended!!

The are real ghost stories from real people
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-12
This book was receommended to me by a friend and I am glad that I gave it a shot. The stories here are realistic even though they are quite strange and about a mysterious world that many of us never give a second thought about. I thought the story about his grandmother calling on the phone was creepy but very heartwarming too. But there are pages after pages of similar events retold by his friends and family. I never thought there were ghosts in Texas because you never hear about them that much. New England is always full of weird stuff, but I was surprised how much happens in Texas too. Well written.

Texas
Stephen F. Austin: Empresario of Texas
Published in Paperback by Yale University Press (2001-10-01)
Author: Gregg Cantrell
List price: $25.00
New price: $7.98
Used price: $3.00

Average review score:

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
Gregg Cantrell has tackled a sacred cow and come out unscathed. His new book, Stephen F. Austin, Empresario of Texas is a meticulously researched and carefully written profile of a man we only thought we knew.

Our knowledge of Stephen Fuller Austin, is gleaned largely from the work of Eugene C. Barker. His 1925 tome, Life of Stephen F. Austin, painted this renowned figure as "The Father of Texas"...and rightly so. However, the Austin we see in Barker's work is a flat two-dimensional character lacking much of the humanity needed to explain the heroism behind the hero.

Though technically accurate, Barker provided little to help us understand the motivations behind Austin the man or of the dynamic forces that led to the making of a republic.

In Stephen F. Austin, Empresario of Texas. Gregg Cantrell brings to life the real Stephen F. Austin with all of his strengths and foibles. We learn in some depth how Austin was destined for greatness, a direct product of his father's influence. His father, Moses Austin, at one point was quite wealthy and wielded a powerful hand in creating his son in his own image. He wanted him to be a gentleman living in the world of high finance. Who Stephen F. Austin was and the way he thought all bear the mark of Moses Austin's influence.

When the younger Austin grew into manhood, his father put him in charge of various business ventures within the Austin empire. Stephen's training paid off as he showed himself to be adroit at business. Unfortunately, an economic depression and several bad business dealings (mostly initiated by the elder Austin), left the family buried in overwhelming debt.

By 1820, Moses Austin saw a possible way to get his head above financial water. He became the first Anglo to get permission to colonize Spanish Texas. Unfortunately, he died before realizing his goal. His deathbed request was that Stephen bring the colony to fruition. Under a sense of instilled familial loyalty very characteristic of the young Austin, he reluctantly abandoned his own course to obey his father's wishes.

When Mexican independence became a reality, Stephen F. Austin skillfully navigated through the waters of the diplomatic intricacies to which he had been thrust. He began to see that building his colony was a way to repay the enormous debts the family had accumulated and to restore a measure of honor to his father's name. He would make his fortune through land. He threw himself wholeheartedly into the work of colonizing Texas and it soon became clear that it was not just another business venture but a mission. This mission would eventually be to create an independent Texas by any means.

Austin earned the title "Father of Texas" by overseeing every aspect of the colony and the lives of those under his care. He became a fierce advocate for the rights of his colonists and worked tirelessly for many years (many times to his own detriment) to ensure the success of the colony.

His was not an easy task. The central government in Mexico was in a constant state of turmoil. Cantrell shows us that one of Austin's biggest strengths was his ability to forge alliances with the powers at the heart of Mexico and the Tejano elite of Texas. Men like Don Erasmo Seguín and Lorenzo de Zavala had the deepest respect for Stephen F. Austin and shared his vision of Texas. He even earned the respect of those who opposed him.

Throughout the book, Cantrell discusses Austin's struggle with his personal demons. All through his life, Austin was plagued with self-doubt and self-pity. He also experienced bouts of deep depression. His physical stature was not great and sometimes even frail due to chronic illness. What set Stephen F. Austin apart was that he pushed himself to the limits of human endurance and set his own interests aside many times for the good of others. Therein lies his heroism. He persisted when lesser men would have quit.

Our tendency with heroes is to deify them and negate their humanity. Cantrell pulls no punches in revealing the full human nature of Stephen F. Austin. It was surprising to this reader to learn Austin's attitudes toward blacks and toward Catholics. Though in theory, Austin opposed the institution of slavery, he himself owned slaves. He fought diligently for his colonists to keep their slaves and not to free slaves already living in Texas. He feared that if blacks were freed, their number would increase. His vision was for a Texas populated predominately by whites.

He looked upon Catholicism as gross 12th century ignorance, a yoke of oppression that retarded Mexico's progress into the 19th century. Austin seldom voiced these feelings except to a few close friends. It would not have faired well in his diplomatic relations.

Stephen F. Austin was indeed human. He wasn't perfect. He made mistakes; but until his death at age 43, he never faltered in his devotion to Texas.

Stephen F. Austin, Empresario of Texas brings a clear understanding of the events that led to the Texas Revolution. If you have ever wondered why there was an Alamo, Goliad or San Jacinto, then you should read this book.

The narrative is clear and well written and it held my attention from page one. I highly recommend this book.

Reads like a novel, but it's all true!
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-08
This biography is written so well, and the story so interesting, it could be a novel from James Michener. If you are interested in Texas history, Southwest history, Mexican history, or Westward Expansion and Manifest Destiny, this book is a must read. I'll be VERY suprised if you don't like it.

Stephen F. Austin: The Person
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-26
Comments about the personal development of historical figures are sometimes ignored in favor a list of achievements. Cantrell includes details of how Moses Austin encouraged his son to be a big thinker. The Austin family's "can do" attitude is certainly reflected in in Stephen's life.

Life of Austin
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-21
This is the first biography of "The Founder of Texas" since Eugene Barker's magisterial work published in 1925. A wait of nearly 75 years for a modern follow-up is tolerable when the results are as good as this.

Austin was a complicated figure; much of his life played out in contradictions: born a Southerner, he was educated in the Northeast; an eloquent and persuasive spokesman in the public arena, he found it difficult expressing his emotions to those closest to him and never married; abhorring slavery, he fought for the right of slavery to exist in Texas; a cultivated man, he spent most of his life on the coarse and harsh frontier; he longed for peace and stability in his life, yet lived during extremely chaotic times; driven to "put his house in order," he claimed his only mission in life was "to redeem Texas from its wilderness state." His father inspired his son to dream big dreams and take on the challenges and responsibilities required to make them realities; when Moses Austin died before being able to colonize the 200,000 acres he acquired in Texas, he left it to Stephen to accomplish. And he did. Austin was not perfect and made mistakes (and enemies); possibly his biggest mistake was going to Washington to petition recognition for Texas at the time that the Alamo fell and, even more importantly, when Sam Houston defeated Santa Anna at San Jacinto six weeks later. Recognizing the significance of that victory not only for Texas but for himself, he hastened to Texas from Washington as quickly as possible. He lost the presidency of the Republic to Houston. A sickly man most of his life, he died of fever in December 1836, only six months after his return.

Gregg Cantrell's biography is a pleasure to read. Informative and compelling, it's a "Life" of Austin and not a "Life and Times." He captured my interest right from the beginning; not hesitant to indicate Austin's shortcomings, he also obviously respects the man. It's a solid, well written biography of an important figure in Texas (and American) history. Highly recommended.

Texas
Still: Cowboys at the Start of the Twenty-First Century (The M.K. Brown Range Life)
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (2008-02-01)
Authors: Robb Kendrick and Marianne Wiggins
List price: $50.00
New price: $31.49
Used price: $25.50

Average review score:

true craftsmanship
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Still is not simply a book of cowboy tintypes. This book has depth as it is filled with revealing portraits of cowboys created with an antiquated process that requires true craftsmanship. Because each tintype is crafted by hand (and beautifully done), they each have unique and unreplicable characteristics analogous to the portraits of the cowboys themselves. In additon to the craftsmanship, there's an impressive amount of these portraits with each subsequent one being just as interesting as the previous. Accompanying the portraits are several stories from the cowboys that add a more personal element to the book. Still is a beautifully executed book of tintype cowboy portraits that I highly recommend to anyone.

Spectacular Imagery
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
I have always been fascinated with old world photographic processes. After browsing through the book several times I was struck with the portraits themselves. While these portraits were recently done you easily get the feel that these cowboys are from a time gone by.

An incredible way of life incredibly captured by a talented photographer

Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-03
Beyond the beautiful photographs the piercing eyes in these portraits tell it all.
These cowboys and cowgirls are serious about what they do and how they do it. Serious
about living life to the fullest on their own terms.
I must be honest and tell you I am not a big fan of cowboy photography or any photography
that romanticizes a culture or group of people. Pretty pictures are a dime a dozen and mean little
in the understanding of the people being photographed. Think current day celebrity portraiture.
These portraits show dedication to documenting a people and way of life long forgotten
by modern day Americans. I think you will feel the spirit of these people when you look
at these tintypes and read the stories of the cowboys in their own words. This book belongs in any serious collection of the American West way of life.

Beautiful!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
I ordered this book after hearing an interview with the author/photographer on NPR. Captured in the spirit of yesteryear, these photographs of modern cowboys are just beautiful!

Texas
Tales of Old-Time Texas
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (1984)
Author: J. Frank Dobie
List price: $19.95
New price: $6.30
Used price: $4.72

Average review score:

Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-14
Tales of Old-time Texas is classic story telling at its best. J. Frank Dobie weaves you in and out of stories of the old-west in Texas. Cowboys, Indians, bank robbers, mythical beasts, gold, hidden treasures: this collection of stories has it all. Dobie writes down stories from the past as told to him. Makes you ready to get your maps of Texas out and go prospecting.

Texas Tales Well Told
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-15
It is for good reason that J. Frank Dobie is known as the Southwest's master storyteller. With his eye for color and detail, his ear for rhythm of language and song, he movingly spins tales of Texas collective heritages. This is a collection of 28 stories filled with vivid characters, exciting historical episodes, and traditional themes.

Lots of fun!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-23
This is a great old book. Read about Josiah Wilbarger, who lived through a scalping and the woman who found him in her dreams, a bear who stole a pig and fattened it up, a ghost rider, a thief who took things from homes and walked right by the owner's dogs, a man who fought a tribe of hostile Indians singlehanded with the help of a load of hickory nuts, and various amusing stories about lost treasure and frontier life. This book is a treasure trove of tall tales and yarns that I couldn't put down.

The untold history of Texas
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-15
Forget about the Alamo, San Jacinto and the heros that have made Texas famous throughout the world. Here are the stories only the real Texans know about. These are the stories my grandmother used to tell me when I was a kid. They carry on the tall-tale tradition and reinforce the Texan image of grandeur and hyperbole.

Texas
Ten Cows to Texas
Published in Hardcover by Handprint Books (2005-12-29)
Author: Peggy Mercer
List price: $16.95
New price: $8.51
Used price: $1.13

Average review score:

"Ten Cows to Texas " by Peggy June Mercer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-16
Ten Cows to Texas by Peggy Mercer is perhaps the best children book I have come across in many moons.

It's a silly funny and wholesome tale for children aged 3 to 8 that involves the sage of Ten Cows that need to be in El Paso Texas the next day to get in movies and t.v. commercials, etc.


But they are in the boondocks of Lonesome Cow GA.

So they hijack an 18 wheeler truck and a sleepy driver and Mimi the head cow( sister) drives the big truck across the South to Texas!


The book's art work is amazing and very very bright with great Colors and sparkles on the cover, and the text is great. The artist captures the true flavor of Texas with Jack Rabbit, Whitetailed deer and Texas Blue Bonnets.

Texans have grabbed the book by the horns and the book is now found in the Alamo Gift Shop, and Famous BUCKHORN Saloon & Gift Shop in San Antonio, Texas and at the YO Ranch Hotel in Kerrville, Texas and the Bandera General Store on Main Street in Bandera, Texas. Also at Barkley's Outdoor World in Bourne, Texas

I met the author, Peggy Mercer, on a Texas Book Tour
at Hastings Books in Kerrville Texas. She autographed a book for me. I was thrilled and my grand-daughter Juliania Nathan will get it soon.

It Five Stars " *****" Very Funny and Something that has never been done before!

Tink Nathan
Author & critic,
Camp Verde Outpost Ranch,
275 Witt Road,
Camp Verde, Texas 78010-3600


Two young sisters in Boerne Texas got the book and they fought over who was going to read it first.

Kids Love it!

That is what books are about and this is a fun, fun, fun book by Peggy June Mercer.

Excellent Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-15
Thumbs up. Children need more of these conversational, fun and rewarding books. Life is too serious, even for children. Vivid illustrations and the fact that MIMI and crew won't give up, make this a great read for children, by a great storyteller, one of Georgia's best! 5 Stars!

Childrens delight
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-12
I am not a teacher or librarian just a Gram that tries to keep a good collection of books for the kids. This book is wonderful, the story is a fun story for children, makes reading fun for them. The colors are bright something that keeps the little ones attention, drab they dont like. Its in a cartoon format which children love. All in all this is a wonderful childrens book. And this gram loves it to.

One written for kids instead of critics
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-31
This is a great book for children written by an educator who understands the minds of children in the age group for whom the book was written. I have watched children read this book and also watched those too young to read "see" a story through the excellent pictures. As a retired professional educator who spent many years trying to deal with children who were reluctant to read, I guarantee that this book will be enjoyed by the little ones.

Texas
Texas
Published in Audio Cassette by Sunset Productions (1995-11)
Author: Dana Fuller Ross
List price: $25.00
Used price: $1.00
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

I have to admit att WW's get 5 stars from me...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-25
This is Book #5 of the Wagon's West Series and just as good as the previous ones.

This one deals with the war between Texas and Mexico as well as how Texas becomes a state.

A lot of our favorite characters are back and in this one Danny Taylor and Chet Harris are not only forced to make choices that will affect their lives but they also grow up rather quickly. The Blake's as well as Ginny are again in this one.

Not bad, but not the best of the WW series
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-29
Maybe it's because it's the first non-Oregon Trail book in the series, but Texas just does not have the "oomph" of most of the other books. The major characters of the series so far take a backseat to lesser characters in this book, breaking away much of the familiarity with the series. It is still a good book, especially if you want a novel set during the Mexican-American war. However, don't lose any sleep if you are trying to read the entire series and can't find this one in your library.

Continuance of Western Heritage
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-11
I am the proud owner of the entire Wagons West Series (all 24 novels). I began reading them in high school some 19 years ago. I have just recently begun re-reading the series and it's like visiting old friends. Texas, picks up two years after the settling of Oregon and we find the United States in the process of annexing Texas into the Union. Soon old characters like Whip Holt and Lee Blake are back in the saddle doing what they do best, helping our country expand, with selfless dedication. We are introduced to new friends who display the same attributes of the earlier settlers in the Oregon series. Overall, the book is quite enjoyable, and it is almost imposssible to put down. The reader is transported to the old West, and can develop a sense of pride and understanding for those brave men and women who were the trailblazers of our American history.

Manifest Destiny And Statehood For Texas - Superb Reading!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-07
Dana Fuller Ross' novels of America's great expansion into the western territories is some of the most intelligent, well written and well researched historic fiction I have read. "Texas" is Book 5 in a series of 24 novels which truly bring history to life in a panoramic saga of one of the United States' most important and fascinating periods.

By 1844 the pioneers who forged the Oregon Trail were well established in Oregon Territory. Various wagon trains had followed their lead and the American population in the Pacific Northwest began to grow at an amazing rate. The new settlers' farms, ranches, offices, boatyards, orchards and lumber mills were thriving. Men like the aging former President Andrew Jackson, Sam Houston, President of the Republic of Texas, future US President James K. Polk, Majority Leader of the US Senate, Andrew Johnson and President John Tyler planned to fulfill America's "manifest destiny" - the belief that America had a God-given right, or destiny, to expand the country's borders from "sea to shining sea." Their priorities were to settle the Oregon boundary dispute with Great Britain and admit Texas to the Union.

Rallying to the cause of Texas liberty from Mexico, volunteers from Oregon left their homes and joined the Texas Rangers, built the Texas navy, consented to repeat their arduous journey across the American continent and traveled east to lead wagon trains of new settlers to Texas. The United States sent wagon loads of rifles, guns and ammunition to assist the Texans, and finally the new state of Texas joined the Union as the nation's 28th state. The Mexican American War, which followed, culminated in US victory. The Texas boundary was set at the Rio Grande, and the US also bought New Mexico Province and what was called Upper California from the Mexicans. And the US/Oregon border with Great Britain was finally established at the 49th parallel.

Many of the characters from the first four books appear in "Texas" and new ones, both historical and fictitious, are introduced. Colonel Leland Blake and his wife Cathy leave their home in Oregon temporarily when they are given charge of the huge new wagon train to Texas. Danny Taylor and Chet Harris, who were adolescents on the Oregon Trail, both volunteer for the Texas Rangers to fight under their idol Captain Rick Miller. Harry Canning, another Oregon veteran, goes to Texas to put his boat building skills to use. The author gives these characters tremendous depth and illustrates how settling in the new land, along with new responsibilities, changes them and effects their relationships and lives.

The history, characters, plot and subplots in "Texas" are some of the most exciting and dynamic in the series. I love history, and while I have read and studied this period in America's development, I have learned so much from reading the first five Wagons West" books. I plan to continue until I read them all. A wonderful reading experience.
JANA

Texas
Texas Almanac 2000-2001 (Texas Almanac)
Published in Paperback by Dallas Morning News (1999-10)
Author: Texas A & M University
List price: $11.58
New price: $1.50
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Texas for the millenium
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-01
What a find! From environmental information to history to state government, the Texas Almanac has it all. The book lists helpful information for natives and visitors, from the National Wildlife Refuges to facts on Texas tourism and the info on hunting and fishing licenses. Also available are little factoids, such as the the brief period in history that the Texas Capital was actually a steamboat and the history of oil in the Lone Star State. A must for anyone who wants to know more about the state!

Texas for the millenium
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-01
What a find! From environmental information to history to state government, the Texas Almanac has it all. The book lists helpful information for natives and visitors, from the National Wildlife Refuges to facts on Texas tourism and the info on hunting and fishing licenses. Also available are little factoids, such as the the brief period in history that the Texas Capital was actually a steamboat and the history of oil in the Lone Star State. A must for anyone who wants to know more about the state!

The Best Dish on Bush
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-27
You don't have to be Texan to appreciate the latest and greatest edition of The Texas Almanac. The book is chock full of interesting information about the Texas Rangers (the law enforcement group, not Bush's former baseball team), as well as bits of trivia that make you wonder why George W. would ever want to leave the second largest state in the US.

The almanac also has plenty of helpful facts, such as the climate, weather disasters and population of each county in the Lone Star State.

This book is great for anybody, but is a must for every journalist and television news analyst who intends to interview the governor of Texas on his presidential bid.

Texas Almanac -- Millennium Edition
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-12
Little Dallam County (pop 5891) has the highest per capita income in the state of Texas? San Antonio is the second largest city in Texas?, ahead of Dallas! These are the kind of facts you will readily find in the Millennium Edition of the 2000 - 2001 Texas Almanac. This edition features a concise history of the Texas Rangers, an improved layout of all 254 counties and the all important, "Texas Pronunciation Guide". If you are a glutton for minuet facts about Texas you will enjoy the Millennium Edition of the Texas Almanac.

Texas
Texas Alphabet
Published in Hardcover by Quail Ridge Press (2000-07)
Author: Laurie Parker
List price: $15.95
New price: $10.39
Used price: $4.98

Average review score:

Knowing your ABC's Texas Style
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-16
My niece loves this one also. These books are great!! I really recommend them.

Great book for a great state!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-22
I'm a Texas girl born and bred and live in another state. You can take the girl out of Texas but you can't take Texas out of the girl. This is an awesome book for anyone who loves the Lone Star State. The illustrations are beautiful and it has a nice rhythm to words. I love that the author mentions less known facts/cities/places. It is the perfect gift for a Texan where ever they live.

Interesting and Entertaining
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-27
Although I am not a native Texan, I have choose to live here. Texas Alphabet can be enjoyed by everyone who has a love for state trivia or the alphabet. Each letter is used to tell about things unique to Texas, and many of the cities (large and small) are included throughout the book. As a middle school teacher, I found this book to be a great way to get my students interested in Texas history and have fun at the same time! A must read for parents and teachers alike! (You don't have to be a TEXAN, ya'll ,to enjoy this book--the author is from Mississippi and wrote the entire book from research done via Internet!) This picture book could also be enjoyed on the elementary level when doing a unit on the 50 states. Enjoy!

Caution: this book will make "displaced" Texans homesick!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-08
Our children were given this book by my aunt, who has started a tradition of Texas-themed gifts, so that they will not forget their "heritage."

I must admit that this book sat for quite a while during our most recent time of settling in here in the Middle East (we are humanitarian aid workers). When our oldest son asked for it to be read recently, I was expecting the typical one item/picture per letter alphabet book. I was pleasantly surprised with the engaging rhyming text and loved the list of towns for each letter (although my children did get tired of, "Oh, look that's where Aunt So-and-so" went to college," etc.).

Bottom line: this is a truly delightful book which actually manages to cover what it means to be a Texan, from past to present.

If you are a Texan, displaced or otherwise, I highly recommend purchasing this book, and I, personally, am placing several orders for gifts.

Texas
Texas Baby
Published in Kindle Edition by Harlequin Superromance (2007-09-01)
Author: Kathleen O'Brien
List price: $4.95
New price: $3.96

Average review score:

Whose the daddy???
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-13
Josie Whitford is a waitress in a small Texas town. She got together with a man named Chase Clayton IV and became pregnant. The day that she learns that she is pregnant she finds out that Chase is engaged to be married. She goes to the engagment party to confront Chase.

There is only one problem. When she finds Chase he is not the man that impregnanted her.

Josie and Chase figure this out and decide to ivestigate and find out who has been using his name.

While they investigate sparks fly between the two even though Chase is getting married in about a month.


Who is impersonating Chase?? What happens between Chase and Josie?? Read Texas Baby

Another great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-19
Josie Whitfield wasn't trying to break up the party when she crashed her car into the front gate of the Clayton ranch during Chase Clayton's engagement party. She was just trying to confront him with the fact that she was pregnant and he was going to be a father, and perhaps find out why he had disappeared after a quick one month fling and a new pair of bed sheets. Unfortunately, she passed out from exhaustion before she could park the car. Tired and overworked, though recently out of a job after introducing her creepy, vengeful manager to the joys of morning sickness, Josie finds her way to Chase's doorstep, only to discover that she has been duped. She knows intimate details about his childhood, but she has never seen this sexy, sensitive cowboy before in her life.

Chase Clayton is about to get married to his childhood friend and the owner of the adjoining Everly Ranch, Susannah Everly, who needs to marry to satisfy the requirements of her grandfather's will. The ranch means everything to her, and she would do just about anything to keep it. Many in town hope the marriage of convenience might blossom into something more, but Chase knows of the tangled history between Susannah and his best friend and ranch manager Trent Maxwell, and his heart just isn`t in it. The appearance of a lovely, pregnant waif who knows private details about his life, claiming to be the mother of his child-to-be certainly doesn't help. And who is this impersonator running around seducing women on his behalf? Chase and Josie join forces to track down Mr. Flim Flam, and end up discovering much more than they had expected.

Kathleen O'Brien's poetic style and her ability to create warm, genuine characters and steamy romantic tension (and occasionally a spooky, engaging murder mystery!) really set her books apart. Kathleen has a gift for story, and a companionable way of drawing readers in and making them comfortable. In the Firefly Glen series, she introduced readers to the town of Firefly Glen, the very embodiment of the joy of returning home, a place where natives and travelers alike can find a warm smile and a helping hand. In Quiet as the Grave she explored the darker desires of the heart, and created a creepy murder mystery that certainly sent a shiver down my spine. Throughout all of her books she explores the love found in all areas of our lives- the love for a niece, a neighbor, a best friend, or a life companion. Thank you for many hours of happy reading, Kathleen!

More, please?!?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-13
Josie Whitford is a waitress in a small town when she is seduced by a handsome cowboy who says he is Chase Clayton IV. He takes her out, buys her fancy sheets, and other luxuries that she could never afford, and then disappears into the night. She realizes she is not in love with the man who left her, but she does find herself pregnant with his baby.

Josie is angry and confused and finds herself going to find the man who left her. When she crashes his engagement party she is stunned to find out the man she fell for, is not the real Chase Clayton IV. Chase is about to marry his childhood friend to help her save her ranch, when Josie throws him for a loop.

Josie and Chase make great leading characters. As a heroine she is strong, yet vulnerable. She has been taken in by a con, has no money yet she feels the need to go back to her old life and not take charity. She shows her true colors and fights for the right to stand on her own two feet, when she could have easily taken advantage of Chase's generosity. Chase may have money but he never looks down on Josie, nor does he easily give in to his lust knowing he is engaged to another woman - even though the marriage would have been in name only. He only goes to Josie, the woman he lusts after when his "bride-to-be" goes after the man she loves. Two better characters could not have been created for this tale of love and lies.

Kathleen O'Brien is a talented author who created a tale that is emotionally fulfilling. She makes Texas come alive as Josie and Chase search for the man who used his name. Whether in real life, Chase would have been so forgiving, or if Josie would have truly walked away are to be left to the reader's imagination, however in this novel, the scenes feel real and give a sense of being a part of the world these characters live in.

This reader enjoyed this novel and will be looking for more of Ms. O'Brien's backlist to find out what this author has to offer.


fun contemporary romance
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-12
College student and waitress Josie Whitfield is elated to learn she is pregnant as she thinks she loves her boyfriend Chase Clayton IV. However, when she goes to inform him, she is stunned as he left without a word. Outraged, she heads to his vast Clayton Creek ranch to confront him. Josie crashes Chase's engagement party that includes enough guests to fill up Texas University's football stadium.

Even more stunning is she finds this Clayton is not her Clayton. He agrees to help her find the scoundrel even though she destroyed the gala and embarrassed his fiancée Susannah Everly. As they travel together, the real Clayton and Josie are falling in love, but his engagement to his neighbor requires he do the honorable thing by her so she can control her family ranch.

The real Clayton is too nice a guy to be real as his sacrifices are beyond noble; for instance he is willing to marry to help his neighbor and goes on the quest to help Josie find the scoundrel pretending to be him. Still in spite of this perfect paragon, TEXAS BABY is a fun contemporary romance as the modern day chivalrous knight in shining armor and the damsel in distress make a fine couple while his engagement to Susannah adds complications to the lead couple's changing relationship.

Harriet Klausner

Texas
Texas Christmas Grooms: Unexpected Blessings/A Christmas Chronicle (Heartsong Christmas 2-in-1)
Published in Paperback by Barbour Publishing, Incorporated (2005-09-01)
Authors: Vickie McDonough and Pamela Griffin
List price: $4.97
New price: $0.49
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Another wonderful heartfelt romantic story!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-22
A nanny who loves two children is supposed to turn them over to an uncle who refuses to acknowledge them and a man who's not ready to settle down meets a woman longing for adventure. Both of theses stories are wonderfully engrossing reads. I could hardly put the book down. Vicki McDonough and Pamela Griffin have done a terrific job with the historical setting as they created a wonderfully romantic tale in this small Texas town. I love the way the stories show God's leading even in times when we see no way out of our circumstances.

This is a fantastic read and a must have for anyone who likes historical or inspirational romances.

Larupin' good!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-30
Witty and wonderful. These are delightful stories full of loveable characters with the humor threaded throughout. It doesn't have to be Christmas time to enjoy these sweet romances. A must read.

Ex-Texas Rangers Corral Wild Hearts
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-06
Texas Christmas Grooms
By Pamela Griffin and Vickie McDonough
Anna Campbell arrives in Cut Corners, Texas, with young Molly and Mark Olson. After the tragic death of their parents, she, their nanny, is charged with bringing the children to Erik Olson, their uncle and guardian. But Erik refuses to believe they are his kin. If Anna could afford to, she'd keep the children herself, but she can barely provide for herself. Her money is running out and she must return to Dallas to make her living. To do that, she will have to convince the stubborn Erik to take the children. It seems impossible.
Travis McCoy is a traveling photographer who never intends to marry. So why can't he get his mind off the beautiful Vivian Sager? Most of the bachelors steer clear of her because of her bumbling ways. Dreams of adventure and travel consume her. She knows she's clumsy, but oh how she longs to be a wife-to Travis McCoy.
For the last two years, a lucky couple in Cut Corners has found love at Christmas time. Will there be another wedding this year? The Meddlin' Men, four elderly ex-Texas Rangers, called that because of their matchmaking ploys, will do everything they can to make it happen.
If you're looking for a happily-ever-after read, this is your book. Griffin and McDonough provide laughter and love along with true-to-life characters who try to follow God's leadership in their lives.

"Two Charming Tales" understates Vickie McDonough and Pamela Griffin's Texas Christmas Grooms.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-08
Formerly I wasn't a lover of romance novels, but these two authors have changed my mind. The two novellas are filled with characters in the truest sense of the word. Four meddlesome old men, former Texas Rangers, have taken it upon themselves to be the Wild West's matchmakers in the town of Cut Corners for love-shy heroes. The result is heartwarming, humorous and often unexpected. McDonough and Griffin's stories are not cookie-cutter romances. I can't wait for more from these two.


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