Texas Books
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Cal and Pru-SPOILERSReview Date: 2004-02-16
Ms. Barbieri just keeps getting better and better!Review Date: 2004-02-06
A devoted fan
Great book!Review Date: 2004-02-04
dark Reconstruction Era romanceReview Date: 2003-12-31
Cal obtains work at the nearby ranch owned by widow Pru Reynolds. Though the attraction is strong between them, Pru refuses to have anything to do between her and Cal beyond the chores she has employed him to perform on her spread. As he tries to break down Pru's barriers and get past Celeste's sentinel to see his father, Cal will soon become embroiled in dark family secrets that could destroy him if he is not careful. Celeste's married mother was willing to give up all for Buck, but instead was scorned in 1850 New Orleans by the handsome rogue. She has set in motion the destruction of the Star ranch, family, and especially the ailing patriarch.
TEXAS STAR is a dark Reconstruction Era romance that has the key interactions effected by events prior to the Civil War. The story line is exciting on several levels. Cal and Pru make a nice couple, but readers will feel empathy towards Celeste, who though she is a vile villainess is also an innocent victim of what occurred two decades earlier. Fans will enjoy this complex tale of revenge and love in post war Texas.
Harriet Klausner


Could not agree more!Review Date: 2008-03-09
Texas Treasure by Betty BrooksReview Date: 2001-02-01
Couldn't put it down!Review Date: 2000-06-13
An engaging heartfelt bookReview Date: 2000-05-02

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Texas Women on the Cattle TrailsReview Date: 2007-03-08
One of the best Texas history books I've readReview Date: 2007-08-17
The information gathered is well-researched and each of the stories entertainingly written. I very much appreciated information, where available, on burial sites and original homesites - thanks to this book, I was able to find Harriet Cluck's gravesite in Cedar Park, making an educational reading experience a personally affecting one as well. I learned a great deal more about the town just by reading this book.
This oughta be on the required reading lists in Texas history courses at universities (wouldn't hurt for women's studies majors to read it as well). Texas Women on the Cattle Trails provides provocative and enlightening information on a well-canvassed but rarely understood portion of Texas history.
New Insights into the Reality of the Old WestReview Date: 2007-06-22
Some of the featured women were young newlyweds when they went up the trail. Others were middle-aged mothers, and one was pregnant. They were widows, business women, heiresses. Some were cultured and educated. Almost all encountered Indians, bandits or rustlers. They endured blizzards, floods, stampedes, disease, death. They made deals with cattle buyers and sellers. They witnessed a new country in its earliest growing pains, and most lived to tell their tales, even to embellish them over time.
Take Minta Corum Holmsley of Comanche, Texas, who rode her horse up the trail sidesaddle, she said, "because we didn't have better sense." On that drive she claimed to have met John Wesley Hardin masquerading as an Indian, and later to have encountered a hundred Sioux who had fought Custer at the Battle of Little Bighorn. She managed to save her favorite cow pony by screaming in one Indian's face until he let go and fled in fright.
Another woman, the widowed Margaret Heffernon Borland of Victoria lost four of her seven children to one epidemic of Yellow Fever. And Margaret herself died at the end of her own cattle drive in 1873. The Wichita, Kansas newspaper announced her death on July 5, at the age of 49, as having been caused by "mania, super-induced by her long, tedious journey and over-taxation of the brain." Her nephew had her body shipped back to Victoria and she is buried in the Evergreen Cemetery.
I particularly enjoyed glimpses of familiar Texas places as they were in the 19th century: the loud bawling of the cattle as they forded the Shoal Creek in Austin; a house in Banquete, once a Confederate hospital and said to be inhabited by ghosts; a roving band of hide-skinners scouring Goliad after a brutal winter decimated the cattle population.
All of these sixteen were ranchwomen, skilled at riding, either sidesaddle or astride, or at handling a horse or mule-drawn wagon. They were proficient in the use of lariats, branding irons, whips, and castrating knives. They carried their share of the workload, and faced all the same hardships and hazards of driving cattle up the trail as the men. In these pages, you won't find a single damsel in distress. There are no dance hall queens or saloon floozies either. The sixteen women profiled here validate the importance of ordinary lives and offer new insights into the reality of the frontier West.
A must read for those interested in the cattle drives.Review Date: 2007-03-29
To my pleasant surprise, the book was every bit as good as Hunter's great classic. Edited by Sara R. Massey, this new volume features the stories of sixteen remarkable women who either accompanied their husbands up the trail or managed herds on their own. Facing the same hazards as the men, these women rode astride or sidesaddle, drove buggies or wagons, and endured thirst, danger, storm, and stampedes. None of these women were common people; all exhibited above-average ambition and courage. Most went on to lead successful lives, but their stories, ably told by eighteen knowledgeable contributors, are not altogether happy ones. Even so, the book is interesting, thrilling, and inspiring. A good addition to anyone's Old West collection.


Texicans - A Must ReadReview Date: 2000-07-31
Thanks ElizabethReview Date: 2000-06-20
The TexicansReview Date: 2000-05-24
The TexicansReview Date: 2000-06-21

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The wild and dirty WestReview Date: 2008-04-11
The character of Katrin, the German emigrant, was especially interesting. Thrust into circumstances beyond her control, she adapts why still remaining so rigid in many ways. When asked if what she and her husband had accomplished would matter in the long run, she replied "You have to think on what we do today and whether we do it right. That's all we can do."
If you enjoy American historical fiction that isn't "sanitized" for today's world, you will enjoy this read. Also, for a similar read with lots of humor but an interesting look at US in the 1800's try Turpentine: A Novel.
LIFE IS DIFFICULT FOR IMMIGRANTS IN NOVEL OF EARLY TEXASReview Date: 2007-03-29
Joseph Kimmel is a Missouri schoolteacher who lives a simple life instructing 13-year-old boys in Greek, Latin, and mathematics. When he learns of his brother Isaac's death in Texas, he sets off with one horse, one pistol and two saddlebags filled with provisions, riding alone into an unfamiliar wilderness. Once on the Texas plains he's waylaid by Luck, the runaway slave, who steals his horse. After two months afoot, Joseph meets up with Henry Castro who is bringing Alsatian immigrants to the town of Castroville that he has founded west of San Antonio. There Joseph meets Katrin, a young, flighty woman, who is being stalked by Ten Elk, the local Comanche leader. At Castro's urging, Joseph agrees to marry her and take her away from possible harm. Moments after the wedding, a Texas Ranger shows up with Luck hog-tied and slung over Joseph's saddle horse, so Joseph decides to take Luck, too, rather than leave him in the hands of this ruthless Ranger. On their journey to the Guadalupe Mountains, Aurelia is pawned off on the group by a camp cook turned Indian scout who is afraid of her supernatural powers. Together these four set out to build a new life in the Texas Hill Country.
It is difficult to tell such a story without sinking into unlikely coincidence and predictability, but Vida pulls it off. She is especially strong with dialogue and coveys to perfection the cadence of a foreign accent, the texture of a slave dialect, and the wordy excesses of unschooled pioneers. Clearly she has done much research and her feel for the common folk, with all their faults and prejudices lends authenticity to the period detail.
I longed for more of "sheep on the gentle dips and sloping honey-colored hills," more of the Medina River "running fast, freshets of water catching twigs on the bank, knitting them together, then spitting them out." But this is a brutal Texas filled with Indian depredations, bogged steers drowning in quick sand, lynchings, and killing fevers. There's little time for pondering star-studded prairie skies and bluebonnet meadows.
In her Acknowledgments, Nina Vida says, "I didn't know if the world needed another book about Texas." My response to that is any vigorous, atmospheric book like this one is always welcome. It's just so much better when it is about Texas.
ASTONISHINGReview Date: 2006-11-06
A different take on TexasReview Date: 2006-11-05

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Great BookReview Date: 2007-02-28
yay for JWOReview Date: 2003-03-25
J-Wo totally rox my sox off!Review Date: 2003-03-10
I can honestly say that I have not read J-Wo's book yet, but I will for sure because it's gotta be totally good. i am also going to purchase: This Book is for All Kids but Especially My Sister Libby. libby died- by jack simon who is also known as breakfastclub and is dairyman88's boyfriend.
Anyways good luck reading this book. i totally recommend it just becuase J-Wo is the author.
J-Wo RulesReview Date: 2003-01-17

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thhey rode for the starReview Date: 2001-11-22
Phenominal book!Review Date: 2000-02-03
Proving The LegendReview Date: 1999-12-02
Filled with illustrations and annotations, it is not only a great read from beginning to end, but also the perfect book to pick up and browse when you have a few minutes. Unfortunately, it is so well written that if you start to browse through it, you may find yourself reading through to the end.
I am anxiously awaiting the second volume that brings the Rangers' history up to the present.
Can't wait for the next one. Great read.Review Date: 1999-08-20
A real coffee-table book, but you won't want to let it rest there. Great photographs and illustrations. I'm looking forward to the post-Civil War Ranger History which I hope follows soon.

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Think Like an ArchitectReview Date: 2007-09-27
Short answer? Terrifically! I learned something interesting about the history, art and science of architecture in every chapter.
As I finished the book, which I accomplished faster than I would have liked or imagined, it occurred to me that Hal Box accomplished with this book what Vitruvius, the first century BC Roman architect, espoused as the goals of good architecture: commodity, firmness, and delight. The book accomplished its program of encouraging me to think more like an architect (commodity); the ideas and illustrations are thoughtfully and artfully presented in a sturdy format which will withstand years of referencing and re-reading (firmness); and Professor Box puts forth his ideas and opinions, earned over a long and distinguished career as an educator and practicing architect, clearly and entertainingly (delight).
Whether one plans to build or is simply curious about how to do it right, Think Like an Architect is a must.
Author Hal Box also clearly thinks like a master teacher, a raconteur, and an avid reader.Review Date: 2007-07-04
This is a rich compendium of letters (chapters) written to friends and colleagues, replete with drawings, photographs, and tools such as "10 ways to explore and understand a building," plus a thorough Seeing List, as well as a Reading List. A blend of architectural history and 21st Century reality -- deftly connected by Dean Box's passion for and knowledge about the importance of architecture in our daily lives and our cultural legacies - these are two hundred of the most helpful and inspiring pages you'll read. It also is a fast read. Yesterday in fact an active aficionado friend who has been intimately involved with half a dozen projects in recent years excitedly told me that he'd, "just finished, the best, most enjoyable book on architecture. I lost sleep because of it, staying up to read it at night and awakening early to continue." I knew the title he was about to tell me.
Very Informative and ClearReview Date: 2007-07-30
I am building a second home in Mexico and find that reading and re-reading this book--especially the considerations--continues to inform and clarify my thinking about the project.
Margaret Keys
Thinking Inside the BoxReview Date: 2007-07-18
It was especially interesting to me to learn how a post-war generation of eager young architects were "brainwashed" by Modernism's cerebral rationality. This I can understand, as the enthusiasm followed their experiences of the Great Depression and World War II. Something new was certainly in order. But even newness can become stale and lifeless. Today, as a new generation of architects meets perhaps the even greater challenge of designing buildings that are "sustainable" or "green", we may be seeing another great age of inspired innovation, expanding the smaller scale vernacular experiments of Sam Mockbee, the elegant shelters of Glen Murcutt, and the social works of Cameron Sinclair's Architecture for Humanity Foundation, to influence and shape the mainstream market. I hope that architects, planners and consumers will avail themselves of the wisdom in Mr. Box's book as they participate in this great new adventure.

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Much more than a cookbookReview Date: 2000-08-19
Eat your vegetables!Review Date: 1999-09-18
Fat be damned! Give me another slice of pie!Review Date: 1997-10-18
A taste of homeReview Date: 1999-04-06

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Wonderful animal storiesReview Date: 2007-02-26
Couldn't Put It DownReview Date: 2000-02-11
A Lovely ReadReview Date: 2001-04-12
Strongly recommended for all animal loversReview Date: 2001-08-09
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Being attacked.
Favorite scene with Cal-
Giving Jack a warning.
Together-
Pru hiring Cal to help her at the ranch.
What did you like about Pru-
Her willingness to make her ranch work and create a life for her and her son.
What didn't you like about Pru-
Her stubborness. Doing what she wants and arguing every time someone tells her
what to do, esp. Cal.
What did you like about Cal-
His strength, despite his past and everyone talking about him. His love for Pru and
Jeremy.
What didn't you like about Cal-
Being cold and distant because of his past.