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

Texas
Dallas Stoudenmire: El Paso Marshall (Western Frontier Library)
Published in Paperback by University of Oklahoma Press (1993-03)
Author: Leon Claire Metz
List price: $16.95
New price: $11.38
Used price: $10.72

Average review score:

El Paso Marshall
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-23
Well written and entertaining biography of one-time(late 19th century) El Paso Marshall Dallas Stoudenmire. Metz does a nice job of fleshing out just who Stoudenmire was, and the mammoth job responsibilities he faced, as well, as the numerous contraversies surrounding the man. It is a thrilling tale of a gun-slinger of the "old west", who is really lost to history. A virtual unknown compared to Hickock, Earp, Masterson, etc... Highly recommended to anyone with an interest in the history of the 19th century west, history of gunfighters of the same era, or Texas or frontier history. Fun, informative, and worth your time.

another Metz masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-12
lots of new information. Very well written and researched. very entertaining.

Stoudenmire deserves more recognization
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
This book was well written and easy to understand. Mr. Metz has managed to make this book easy to understand and fun to read, but with much interest. His wordings were excellent; he used adjectives and even described persons or things with vivid colors. He has added some humors to it and it always kept my full attention.

The "4 Deads in 5 seconds" gunfight was the most thrilling. I felt as if I actually witnessed it all and witnessed folks scattered at the very sight of Marshal.

Hollywood should make a movie on Marshal Stoudenmire. I think he's worthy a movie such as it is for Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday in "Tombstone" and "Wyatt Earp".

Violent El Paso tamed by Stoudenmire
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-13
Leon C. Metz was a great author and storyteller with unique writing humor. This book was based on true events. It was well researched and written. I have absolutely no doubts that Mr. Metz attempts to bring out favorable traits of Stoudenmire in order to help him gain much deserved respect and nationwide recognition. Stoudenmire enforced the laws no differently than Wyatt Earp, Pat Garrett and Elfego Baca. Stoudenmire deserves the same honor. Stoudenmire's period in this town was awfully short, but very colorful. Stoudenmire had no fear, not even guns or death. He was able to outdraw every opponent. He sent his wild bullets to harvest souls and sent men on their last jolting rides to the cemetery. His large structure and deadly reputation were all El Paso needed to send hard-cored violent outlaws whining and putting their tails between their shaking legs into hiding or digging their own graves. Stoudenmire's toughness and courage was no match for the outlaws combined together.

. . .

This book is highly recommended for folks who seek excitement in Wild West justice and a wild marshal to match!

Texas
Darcy (Sunfire No. 32)
Published in Paperback by Scholastic Paperbacks (1989-07)
Author: Mary Francis Shura
List price: $2.75
New price: $63.05
Used price: $2.66
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

A southern belle, a witty hero, what more could you want?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-05
If you're looking for a good teen historical romance(perhaps for a young teen who hates history or reading, or both), then Darcy is a winner. The characters are very well done, the plot is tight, and the description is excellent. I particularly liked Michael, an intelligent engineer with an incredible sense of humor. I wish more teen romances had this kind of smart, witty hero. Actually, I wish more BOOKS had this kind of hero. Darcy really grows and changes in the course of the book, also. The Sunfire series is long out of print, so enjoy this one if you're lucky enough to find it!

Good Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
I liked reading this book, I'm sure not too many people have, it couldn't be a best seller or anything like that, but it was fun to read, with all that romance thrown in. If you're looking for just a light book to read, not too heavy but fun, interesting, and well written, this is a good one to read.

Exciting and well written!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-03-03
Darcy is a rebelious teen that get's everything she wants until a terrible hurricane srikes homes, families, and the people she loves. Is the man Darcy loves o.k?

Exciting book of survival!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-02-17
Darcy is a Southern belle in 1900 Galveston, Texas. Wealthy and well-mannered, Darcy has never had to work hard in her whole life. Yet suddenly, a terrible hurricane strikes Galveston. Separated from her family, Darcy must fight for her life, and find her way back to those that she loves.

Texas
The Day the Cowboys Quit (Texas Tradition Series ; No. 7)
Published in Paperback by Texas Christian University Press (1985-10)
Author: Elmer Kelton
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.45
Used price: $1.94
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

wstrnnut
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-06
What a masterpiece of writing! The Day The Cowboys Quit is one of the best novels of the West I've ever read (and I've read a lot of them.) When the characters Hitch and Charlie Waide are introduced, you begin to get a feel for the time and the problems the cowboys faced. It is a multi-tiered novel with plots and subplots that interlace. And talk about getting the reader involved ... when Law was about to be lynched, I couldn't read the words fast enough. This was a book that was good at the beginning, held your interest in the middle, and came on strong at the end. If you only read one western novel this year--this is the one to get. Well done, Mr. Kelton!

Well-written story of conflict on the open range. . .
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-02
Kelton's novel has some of the ingredients of pulp western fiction - big ranchers against the little guys, justice at the end of a rope, an honorable hero wearing a sheriff's badge - but he brings a great deal of insight, experience, and historical background to the task of telling this story. It is enjoyable and full of well-drawn characters and unexpected turns of plot from beginning (a squabble over the brand on a cow) to the end (a gripping courtroom drama).

The title suggests that the book might be a more light-hearted story that focuses on the cowboy strike of 1883, but Kelton's aim is to explore the more complex psychology of the men who live by the Code of the West. The ill-fated strike is over before we are well into the book, and the author focuses on the unexpected and far-reaching results of its aftermath. Like many books about the West, this one is about loss and the passing of an era. The cowboy way of the open rangeland is quickly disappearing as settlers move in and towns spring up, the cattle business falls under the influence of venture capital from the East, and rough justice must give way to law and order.

Most enjoyable for this reader is the characterization of its main character, Hitch, a single cowboy in his thirties for whom circumstance, loyalty, and honor lead him out of a job he loves and into harm's way, until he reluctantly assumes a role of no small responsibility and risk in the new social order on the Texas plains. Not the fearless hero of standard cowboy fiction, Hitch has a good many conflicting feelings,he's more diplomatic than quick with a gun, and his actions require considerable courage.

Kelton's rural Texas background and knowledge of frontier history clearly come through in the many details that enrich the tale he tells. He notes a horse's dislike for flapping laundry on a clothesline. The cowboys drink more strong coffee than whiskey. He realistically describes a man's slow, painful recovery from being pistol-whipped. A man angrily observes the terror of a cowboy who wet his britches as he was being hanged for thievery. And there is much about managing cattle on the open range and the complicated, neverending process of ensuring their ownership.

I highly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in the historical West, cowboys, roundups and branding, frontier social history, the landscape of the plains, frontier justice, the Code of the West, and the struggle for political power and shifting alliances in changing times. Kelton's book is well-written, with memorable characters, and a fair share of suspense.

A Red Letter Read!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-27
"The Day the Cowboys Quit" goes down as a red letter day for western fans! This Spur Award winner by Elmer Kelton is one of his all-time best. His hero, Hugh Hitchcock, is caught between the cowboys he ramrods and the rancher he admires. But when the local cattle barons lay down their own brand of range law by refusing to permit working cowboys to own their own cattle, a strike ensues. The result is a gritty and honest story of real men in desperate times that ranks in the Top 10 westerns ever penned. If you like your westerns confrontational where justice is served in unpredictable fashion, you will love "The Day the Cowboys Quit!"

A very realistic look at cowboy life on the plains of Texas
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-06
this book takes place on the plains of Texas. And shows a passage between the "good ol' days" and the new times ahead. Cowboys are pitted against ranch owners, who start to consider the cowboys more like machines then people. The ranchers post a series of "written rules", that in effect greatly angers the cowboys. Most of the Cowboys in response quit or leave their ranch, to join up in a stike. The stike fails to acomplish it immediate goals, but in the long run, creates a ripple that will change everything. This book was well written, and is able to capture the essence of being a cowboy. this book is based on an actual stike that took place in Texas at a similar time. But since the history books only show brief accounts of the strike, and only that of the ranchers view. The Author based the book "loosely" on the facts, so that he could create a more objective view. This is a fantasic book, I recomend you buy it

Texas
Dead Dog Blues
Published in Hardcover by St Martins Pr (1994-06)
Author: Neal, Jr. Barrett
List price: $22.95
New price: $20.00
Used price: $0.02
Collectible price: $22.95

Average review score:

Dead Dog Blues captures your attention immediately.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-20
This mystery is great because you never know for sure who did it until the very end. The characters in the book are delightful as well as comical. It is different from traditional mysteries and very well written.

Fast and Funny
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-09
Neal Barret has a wonderful command of English and he writes dialogue so well you can hear the characters talking. The story is a fast and fun read with a good share of scares and well drawn characters.

ANOTHER TEXAS AUTHOR WHO KNOWS HOW TO DELIVER!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-22
For readers who enjoy the novels of Joe R. Lansdale-specifically the Hap/Leonard series-let me introduce you to Mr. Lansdale's mentor, Neal Barrett, Jr., a Texas author who's been writing for well over forty years. I've been aware of Barrett as a SF author since the late Sixties, but it was only a few weeks ago that I finally decided to purchase a couple of mysteries by him. I picked up a copy of DEAD DOG BLUES (though it has "Blues" in the title, this isn't a Wiley Moss novel), read a few pages, and found myself hooked line and sinker. I can easily see how Mr. Lansdale was influenced by the work of Neal Barrett, especially with regards to developing one's sense of dark humor and in being able to create a cast of colorful, off-the-wall characters. This is definitely a novel that's filled with both dark humor and an array of colorful characters that leave you wanting more when the last page is finally reached. DEAD DOG BLUES is the story of Jack Track, a native of Pharaoh, Texas, who left town to go to college and disappeared for fourteen years, living a life of crime part of the time and hiding for the rest by riding the rails. When his Uncle Will gets sick, Jack returns to Pharaoh and agrees to take over his uncle's job as town constable on a temporary basis. It's an easy job for Jack. All he has to do is make sure the downtown stores are locked up at night. Things suddenly change, however, when millionaire Max Croomer's dog is murdered in a rather peculiar fashion. Then, Max's maid, Emma, disappears. When Max is murdered and his body is publicly displayed on the local school's football field, Jack realizes that he has a deadly killer on his hands. What makes matters even worse is that Max's wife, Millie, had a brief fling with Jack when they were teenagers, and now she's showing interest in renewing their old relationship. This could cause Jack some serious problems, especially if his girlfriend, Cecily Benet-the yogurt queen of Texas-finds out. The only one Jack can really count on is his close friend, Earl Murphy, both of which shared a childhood of being poor. Now, Earl is a self-made Wall Street millionaire who lives on the lot next to Jack's. There's no house on Earl's property-only stacks of lumber, brick, shingles, pipes, and a shed filled with power tools. Earl cooks on a camp stove and sleeps in his Aston-Martin Lagonda. Being black, Earl still harbors some hard feelings toward the good citizens of Pharaoh, and it doesn't bother him in the least that a few of them have been murdered. Earl, however, has to take a stand when the killer decides to come after Jack. That's why he keeps a .44 Magnum revolver under the seat of his two hundred thousand dollar car. DEAD DOG BLUES is a surprise of the best sort. Mr. Barrett made the town of Pharaoh, Texas come alive with his vivid descriptions and eccentric characters. Though having done things that are against the law, Jack Track is a strong protagonist that tries to do what's right. His relationship with Earl Murphy reminded me a lot of Hap Collins and Leonard Pine in the Joe R. Lansdale series. These are two men who have a bond of friendship between them that can't be broken, and each is ready to come to the other's rescue at a moment's notice. The women in the story (Cecily Benet, Millie & and Smoothy Croomer) are beautiful, smart, sexy, and know how to make a man suffer in ways that only a female can. The supporting characters rang true to the ear and reminded me a lot of people I knew from the small town in North Carolina where I come from. I will say the Mr. Barrett surprised me with who the killer is in the story. I never saw it coming. Few writers are able to catch me like that. I hope the author will eventually bring back Jack Track and Earl Murphy in a future novel. These guys, like Hap and Leonard, are simply a lot of fun to hang out with, and you never know what they're going to get into. Highly recommended.

You owe it to yourself to try Neal Barrett
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-08
If you are a fan of great writing, you must try out Neal Barrett. This "Blues" series is Barrett in top form. After you've torn through these books, check out Joe Lansdale and Andrew Vachss, and while you're at it, track down a copy of Barrett's out-of-print masterpiece, "The Hereafter Gang."

Texas
Deadly Intentions
Published in Hardcover by Congdon & Weed (1982-07)
Author: William R. Stevens
List price: $14.95
New price: $67.76
Used price: $15.97

Average review score:

Required reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
This book should be required reading for every 18 year old girl. A truly compelling story about how we too often judge people by appearances.

truth stranger than fiction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-06
I read the book and saw the movie Deadly Intentions. I believe it but how can anyone be so sick? People like that are a threat for as long as they live.

Doctor Derangement
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-30
William Randolph Stevens, author of DEADLY INTENTIONS, was the prosecuting
attorney in Pima County, AZ, in the 1970's and was responsible for the prosection of Dr. Patrick Henry, a highly intelligent physician, for the attempted murder of his wife, Christina. Henry is one of the more despicable characters you will ever read about (although I'll admit to saying this about half the sleazebags I read about in true crime). He was a man who was able to contol his emotions and to display his normalcy when necessary. He was also cheap, impossibly angry, vindictive, cruelly sadistic, and so cold as to be unimaginable. And was he WEIRD. I don't understand why he got married, though I guess it was his normal side coming out, because he very quicky came to despise his wife and delighted in nothing more than torturing her, both to remain in total control of her and just for his own enjoyment. As one of many possible examples, Christina was freaked out by a certain kind of insect that was common to where the Henrys were living. One night, in an almost unheard of gesture, Pat took Christina out to dinner, though he was so cheap they went to the cafeteria of the hospital where he worked. During dinner he excused himself for about 10 minutes. Upon entering the car to leave, Christina was descended upon by hundreds of the insects, swarming, landing all over her, and getting caught in her hair. Patrick laughed at her all the way home, refusing to stop the car to allow Christina to get out and escape the insects which he had so carefully planted.
Patrick also used to come home from work seething with anger and going into great detail about what he would do to anyone who crossed him. His plans included such things as sharpening a knife on both edges, taking his victim to a swamp (he loved swamps), gouging out his eyes, filling his orifices with firecrackers - small ones so he could stand close to watch - and lighting them, and eventually gutting him with his knife. In his fantasies these sessions might last several days.

He also told Christina that he would kill anyone who ever left him, which Christina finally did after witnessing him mistreat animals and suspecting him of abusing their newborn baby. This started Patrick's intricate and murderous plan which, being meticulous to the point of compulsion and filled with vengeful hatred, he plotted for over 3 years.
The book details the murder attempt, the excellent police work, and the trial and verdict.

It is unusual that I enjoy true crime books written by police or prosecutors. They usually have an amateur feel even if, as is customary, they are ghostwritten. And they are almost always self-aggrandizing making the author the "star" of the book. Another aspect of true crime writing I usually find boring is a lengthy account of a trial.
But DEADLY INTENTIONS is an exception. First of all, though Stevens is a lawyer, he is also a very good writer. The book is credited to Stevens alone and while he plays a major role in the story, particularly in the last half of the book which deals with the preparations for trial and the trial itself, he does not brag. He simply tells a totally fascinating story like a pro. And the lengthy trial section, which in lesser books has sent more than one true crime reader to Tedium City, is the section which pulls the story together and is superb.

DEADLY INTENTIONS is a truly outstanding work of true crime, and it is futher and continuing proof that the genre was considerably better during the 70s, 80s, and early 90s than it is now. You won't want to put it down.

Very good !!!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-08
It's a very good book , here we can even feel the coldness of this young doctor and his terryfied wife .Mr.Stevens did a wonderful work. It really worth reading!!!!

Texas
Death of a Healing Woman
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (1996-09)
Author: Allana Martin
List price: $20.95
New price: $44.95
Used price: $0.29
Collectible price: $24.99

Average review score:

FISHING ON THE TEXAS COAST HAD TO WAIT UNTIL I FINISHED
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-05
I finished reading, THE DEATH OF A HEALING WOMAN, when I went on a fishing trip. The fish had to wait until the authoress solved the mystery. Once in awhile, I still go back and look for a clue that led up to the gruesome murder. When the one who did the killing was caught I almost cheered at the justice of this person's demise. I won't say when you read this novel, I'm saying you must read this novel 'cause it is being reveiwed by the big reviewers. What I would like for you to do is E-mail who sent the article out of a newspaper in the last chapter. I've other things to do than go back and figure this out! THE BEST MYSTERY NOVEL I'VE READ SINCE SHERLOCK HOLMES! LUTHER BUTLE

HELP!!! I CAN'T PUT IT DOWN
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1997-03-23
Allana Martin's book, DEATH OF A HEALING WOMAN, is a page turner. A current television add states that, "LIFE IS DIFFERENT ALONG THE BORDER." Where the mesquite trees from the United States are divided from the mesquite trees from Mexico by the Rio Grande River, there is a society different from any other place in the world. Here where two cultures clash and clutch each other for life and death, this novel tells about a world where witches live with drug smugglers and horse doctors. I am only half way through with this mystery novel, and my only wish is that the book would never end! I'm wondering if a drug mule, an illegal, or a person who is afraid of the mysterious powers of the healing woman, is the muderer. Even though I have a mean streak, I wouldn't tell you who the killer is even if I knew. It is crulerer for you to suffer the suspense I'm experiencing! Luther Butle

Great local color
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-10
Martin writes with a true feel both for place and for mystery. Her knowledge of the Big Bend area of West Texas is reflected in the accuracy with which she captures the people and lifeways of this interesting borderland. Her tale of the healing woman is both intriguing and resolved with a grimly appropriate resolution. This book will whet your appetite for those that have followed.

One of the most entertaining of the modern American mysterie
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-19
I read lots of mysteries, but enjoy the English village murder mysteries the best. This is a welcome addition of the American variety. I also liked this book because the heroine didn't do something stupid that put her in harm's way. It was well written and very enjoyable. I have now ordered her other mysteries.

Texas
Depression Desperado: The Chronicle of Raymond Hamilton
Published in Paperback by Eakin Press (1995-10)
Author: Sid Underwood
List price: $18.95
New price: $14.78
Used price: $30.52

Average review score:

Oklahoma's Depression Outlaw
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-08
Sid Underwood has written a very good and well deserved account of the life of Oklahoma's depression era bandit, who has previously been overshadowed by Bonnie and Clyde. True, Raymond Hamilton ran with Bonnie and Clyde, but his crimes were extreme and his life ended in prison. Underwood's book is very readable and will last as a true crime classic.

Giving Raymond His Due
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-23
Excellent, highly readable, well documented biography of Raymond Hamilton, a colorful Texas bank robber of the 1930's. Hamilton is chiefly remembered today as a sometime accomplice of Clyde Barrow but his own criminal career is equally interesting and far more spectacular.

Depression Desperado is Definitive
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-26
Sid Underwood has written an extremely in-depth account of the Gentleman Bandit. Underwood has traced the history of Hamilton and his cohorts, including Bonnie & Clyde, as well as interviewed many people who have since passed away that knew Bonnie & Clyde, including relatives. Besides giving very detailed accounts pulled from records and the interviews, the book is filled with some great photos. Depression Desperado is both historical and entertaining.

Lots of true action-reads like a true crime magazine article.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-13
this book is an excellent one about the car stealing bank robbers of the midwest during the depression era.Ray Hamilton probably would have been as famous as clyde barrow if his girlfriend had been better looking and wrote poetry to the newspapers,even if her poetry was like Bonnie Parkers'-the type you observe on gas station restroom walls.Somehow depression era thieves almost always get our sympathy,and while you might not be entirely regretful when Ray takes his seat on "ol sparky,"you could at least wish he would have stayed put in prison instead of escaping so many times.This guy escaped from different prisons so many times i was loosing track in the book.He always tried to avoid any type of gunplay if he could,not like his "buddy"?,Clyde Barrow. Ray tries to come off as a John Dillinger,same smooth style of bank robbery. Barrow sort of comes off as a Baby Face Nelson type,quick on the trigger and probably a sadist as well. It was interesting to note that Ray often recruited for his "jobs"the residents of Depression Era hoboe camps,indeed he stayed there himself many times.there was alot of unemployed desperate people there ripe for any opportunity to make some real money or(depart from the world in a hailof bullets.)Of course Ray liked to keep a suitcase with a nice dress suit with him,ready to change skin like a chameleon.When he finally takes his place on the chair,he wants everyone to know,"I never killed anyone".from reading the book i believe he studiously tried to avoid gunplay.The book also shows well how the life of a fugitive is so expensive with different pay-offs to safe houses,etc. so if anyone out there is looking for Hamilton's unrecovered stolen loot,I can say from reading this book,it was spent before Hamilton got his 6 billion amps.Not only that but Hamilton was probably robbing banks to pay his fugitive bills.If only his girlfriend hadn't had such a flat face,who knows where he could have gone!

Texas
The Devil's Book of Culture: History, Mushrooms, and Caves in Southern Mexico
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (2003-12-01)
Author: Benjamin Feinberg
List price: $23.95
New price: $23.95
Used price: $20.95

Average review score:

catch a second class bus from the terminal near the market
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-31
I know for a fact that Ben Feinberg has watched over one hundred hours of "I Dream of Jeanie."

But if that's not enough to convince you to buy his book, you might consider the actual subject matter. How do people in small places not overcome by the hegemony of time and space most people reading this website live with conceive of time and space? Feinberg looks at this, dealing with different categories of time and such from the perspective of the Sierra Mazteca. How do you get to Oaxaca de Juarez from Juatla? Where is the United States, and who are these weird tourists?

Read the book for the answers to these questions and more.

The Devil's Book of Culture
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-12
I've been interested in the Sierra Mazateca for years-- after spending time there, I read the handful of books written about it, yet felt that there was much more to be said. I was thrilled to discover that last year, someone finally wrote a well-researched ethnography about it. Feinberg's book is packed with fascinating observations and reflections on the way people in the Sierra Mazateca understand and talk about their lives, history, and "culture." I would recommend this book to anyone with a background in anthropology or a similar field who is interested in cultural identity negotiation and "indigenous-ness," Oaxaca, sacred mushrooms, and folklore about devils and caves.

Dresses make me feel pretty!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-04
His analysis is brilliant. If you are unsatisfied after reading through once, then I suggest you purchase another copy and read it over again.

I really like kittens!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-28
I know for a fact that Ben Feinberg has eaten Armour(tm) Potted Meat Food Product.

Texas
Discover Texas Dinosaurs: Where They Lived, How They Lived, and the Scientists Who Study Them
Published in Hardcover by Gulf Publishing (1999-03-25)
Author: Charles E. Finsley
List price: $19.95
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Digging Dinosaurs!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-24
One could not want a more well-written or interesting book about paleontology and dinosaurs. The quality is supreme, pictures are the best ever, and content is contagious. It makes the reader feel part of the conversation. Finsley's book gives the reader impetus to become an active digger! Charles Finsley is a master of communicating with the printed word. A must read for all ages!

Tour Guide for Texas Dinosaur Afficionados
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-24
Charles E. Finsley certainly succeeds in in his stated objective of making the story of dinosaurs in Texas into a twentieth-century story. The photographs of fossils as well as the fossil finders are great. The text is informative, comprehensive and slanted for the amateur in search of an overview of the story of Texas dinosaurs.

Discover them!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-15
Mr. Charles E. Finsley give a great picture of the Texas contributions to dinosaur paleontology. Doris Tischler drawings give you not only posture, but feeding habits, behavior and a dynamical perspective of how the Dinosaurs lived. Mr. Langston experience gives a great complement with his participation. If you like dinosaurs, you'll finish this book in just two days! but you'll use it all your life.

Support Your Local Paleontologist
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-16
Support your local paleontologist. This simple phrase describes much of what is learned from this interesting little book. Within, the reader learns where Texas stands in the search for our dinosaur heritage. Using an understandable geologic timeline, the Mesozoic story is told with a Texan viewpoint. Leading professional and amateur paleontologists are showcased as the significant sleuths in the story of how hard it is to find, prepare, study and display dinosaur fossils. Their personal experience educates the reader to the scarcity and importance of material and the hard work that has accumulated information throughout the generations. Using simple enough language for a child but having enough information for the average reader this book is easy to read and quite informative. Throughout, thought provoking questions and "did you know?" tidbits are added to instill in the reader the desire to go hunting dinosaurs for themselves.

Texas
Dishes from the Wild Horse Desert: Norteño Cooking of South Texas
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (2006-05-10)
Author: Melissa Guerra
List price: $29.95
New price: $5.98
Used price: $7.00

Average review score:

Great recipes, easy to read, informative and deep
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-18
With so many cookbooks, the layout can really turn me off of a book. The first thing that struck me when I flipped open to a random page how it drew me in. Most recipes include a bit of the author's personal history with the dish and many introduce with the "old way" of making the dish as well as present a new way that is less labor intensive. Often she will follow up with a recipe for those who want to try the traditional method.

A very thorough book that explores local ingredients, explains when they were served, what you might find in your supermarket and then clearly describes how to prepare the dish.

I'm a recent transplant to Texas and have had my eyes opened to Mexican and Tex-Mex food. This book introduces Norteno cuisine that is found in many traditional border homes. I couldn't wait to try my hand at these recipes.

Also, if you're someone who likes to read cookbooks for enjoyment, you'll love this one.

Recipes from the Wild Horse Desert
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-11
Great cookbook for those that are looking for TRUE South Texas-Northern Mexico cuisine. It is beautifully written and a cookbook you will keep in your library forever.

Great Cookbook!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-20
I am a beginning cook that moved from South Texas and love this book! Now I can make all of my favorites in my own kitchen far from home. The background Melissa gives is so interesting and it makes you feel like she is in the kitchen with you almost!

Outstanding, Authentic, and Beautifully done
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-11
Of of the few, rare, authentic looks at some exceptionally wonderful food. The book is beautiful, and enhances the feel for understanding the landscape and people that authentic south Texas ranch cooking comes from. Thank God Melissa is secure enough in tradition that she did not feel the need to throw Mangos in everything to prove she was a creative chef. I have pet goats that were adopted as orphans, and they are very sweet and loving, so I no longer eat Cabrito, but have had it enough in the past to appreciate the recipes.


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