Texas Books


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

Texas
The Hunter's Prey: Tales of Texas Vampires
Published in CD-ROM by Ellora's Cave (2001-10-16)
Author: Diane Whiteside
List price: $11.00

Average review score:

Wonderful Stories
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-02
I loved all of these stories and can't wait for the full length stories that will come out soon. Even though each story is not very long they have lots of depth and feeling. If you want stories of healing emotionally bruised women so they can love again. These stories are for you. Also these stories are not for the faint of heart.

Love and lust, vampire style.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-24
If you like seductive vampire heroes, you're going to love this book, because it's full of them. There's Don Raphael, once a medieval Spanish knight, now the leader of a band of vampires; Ethan Templeton, his handsome protegee who falls in love with a modern female cop; Jean Marie, a gorgeous Frenchman; and all the other wonderful heroes who populate these stories.

If you're a little wary of gore, don't be. Diane's vampires are lovers, not killers. I, personally, would hapily trade a pint of AB positive for a little of the Don's time! -- Angela Knight

Hot Steamy Vampires!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-22
Diane Whiteside has written a wonderfully erotic collection of stories about 3 vampires. I love Vampire stories anyway, but these were so well written and the stories flowed very well. These are very erotic, steamy & hot stories. I couldn't get enough! I loved the story of Don Rafael and Ethan (two of the vamps) and their first encounter with a young maiden. Lets just say they had their way with her and she wanted more! LOL I won't give away the story lines, but I do highly recommend this ebook. It is a wonderful read and one that you will pull out again and again. Ms Whiteside, if you read this, when is the next book coming out? I want more of these fine, sexy, erotic vamps!!

Texas
The Impact of Intervention: The Dominican Republic During the U.S. Occupation of 1916-1924
Published in Paperback by Univ of Texas Pr (1988-03)
Author: Bruce J. Calder
List price: $11.95
New price: $18.99
Used price: $7.26
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

The Impact of Intervention
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
Updated and enlarged Paperback edition with a new introduction.
Just published
Reviews of the hardcover edition:

"A comprehensive and tolerant study, devoid of jargon. . . . Calder,a historian at the University of Illinois at Chicago, fairly describes the mixed results of the occupation. . . . Some readers may disagree with Mr. Calder's assessment of the occupation's long-term costs-Dominican hostility to the United States and, less directly, the Trujillo regime that began in 1930-but this is nevertheless an excellent study." -The New York Times Book Review
"A work of exceptional historical analysis. . . . Calder is to be commended for his forthright analysis of the American occupation." -American Historical Review
"A particularly good summary of U.S. imperialism at the turn of
the century and a clear description of Dominican society and the
political system at that time." -Political Science Quarterly

BRUCE CALDER, University of Illinois, the author of Politics of Spirit,wrote a new introduction to this book.

"A comprehensive and tolerant study"-New York Times Book Review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-25
"A comprehensive and tolerant study, devoid of jargon. . . . Calder,
a historian at the University of Illinois at Chicago, fairly describes
the mixed results of the occupation. . . . Some readers may disagree
with Mr. Calder's assessment of the occupation's long-term
costs--Dominican hostility to the United States and, less directly,
the Trujillo regime that began in 1930--but this is nevertheless an
excellent study." --The New York Times Book Review

Learn From History
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-26
It's pretty depressing that this book is number 1,773,851 on the Amazon sales list. Let's see: Invade and occupy a country to bring it stability and democracy, provoke a stubborn insurgency, antagonize the populace, find it difficult to complete ambitious infrastructure plans, alienate your allies. Where have I heard this before? Let's hope the epilogue-- a 31-year rule by a brutal despot-- doesn't repeat as well. This is a superb treatment of the US occupation of the Dominican Republic that began in 1916; it's thorough, fair, and well-written. If more citizens--and more policy makers--read books such as this, America would be a humbler, wiser, and stronger country. Why has the Uiversity of Texas Press stopped printing it?

Texas
In The Turnip Truck: Confessions Of A Country Bumpkin
Published in Hardcover by Eakin Press (2005-03-31)
Author: David Shiflet
List price: $26.95
New price: $26.95
Used price: $8.92
Collectible price: $26.95

Average review score:

A great collection of small-town tales!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
I am also biased, because although I didn't grow up with David, I grew up in Emory. "Tom Turner" is my grandfather, and "Tommy Turner" is my uncle. The book is funny, sweet, sad...all those emotions in one book. I could guess at the identities of several of the people, and my dad helped me with a few. If you don't read any other chapter, read the one about "Mama" and building the playhouse. A fun, quick read about life in a small Texas town in the 50s.

Lived and loved In The Turnip Truck
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-01
My review is biased because I grew up with the author, David Shiflet. I could not put this book down because it literally tells the story of my childhood in East Texas with all the fun and all the sadness that real life brings. I was particularly interested in the people in the book because they were real characters in our childhood and I knew their real names. Absolutely one of the best books I've read in the last 10 years.

Harper Lee revisited!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-24
I heard about this book while listening to an interview with the author on NPR. I grew up in a somewhat small town and thought it would be funny to hear someone else's perspective. I ordered a copy and just received it yesterday. Reading through it feels like you're back in the middle of To Kill a Mockingbird, although a lot more funny. It tickles all your emotions; mostly yoru funny bone but it flared up my tear ducts too.

I literally could not put the book down. I usually read a chapter of a book each night but I sped through this one in one evening. Every short story makes you anxious for the next one. He really has a way with putting into words all your senses and puts you in the middle of Smalltown, USA. You feel it, smell it and taste it. I've ordered several more to hand out. Truly a fun and refreshing read.

Texas
Indians Who Lived in Texas
Published in Hardcover by Hendrick-Long Publishing Company (1981-06)
Author: Betsy Warren
List price: $22.95
New price: $42.50
Used price: $6.50

Average review score:

Illustrations make this book appealing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
I bought the book after reading it in my public library because I think the illustrations provide considerable interest for children. I want my grandchildren to share my interest in these cultures. I like the format of the book and the writing is easy for children. I am not expert on Native American (Indian) culture, especially the more recent approaches to the subject but since childhood (some 60 years ago) have been interested in its standards of personal courage,integrity, personal self reliance and self discipline within a community organization. I want to expose my grandsons to the athletic abilitities as well as the excellent memories that Native American culture encouraged. This book does not emphasize the more violent aspects of the traditions. The material can be found elsewhere, but the illustrations make this book excellent for chiidren.

Great book on TX history for homeschoolers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-05
I bought this book at a library sale 3 years ago and I'm so glad that I did. We just went to the annual TX State Pow Wow and this book is the perfect follow-up resource for school. We will continue to use it each year as a starting point for further study into the Native American culture. My additional resource will be the book 500 Nations.

The ONLY book of this type on the market!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-22
With a subject as narrow as Native Americans in a single and specific state, this book was very thorough. Subjects ranged from individual tribe appearance and dress to the specific foods and dwellings used by each. There are detailed maps showing which region each of the ten chief tribes inhabited while in Texas and what caused the disappearance of most from this state.

As a research tool for children I rate this an A+!

Texas
Insiders' Guide to Austin--1st Edition
Published in Paperback by Insiders Guides (1999-03)
Authors: Cam Rossie and Hilary Hylton
List price: $15.95
New price: $2.48
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Wonderful guide!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-02
This is the best travel book, I have come across. I have used it for one year and it has not failed me. The restaurant, lodging and daytrip sections have been particularly helpful. You can't go wrong with this book.

Thank you Hilary and Cam. I hope the 3rd Edition is on its way.

Thorough and easy to read.
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-20
This book is not dry like many guidebooks can be. The authors give enough history and background to put their topics in context, but not so much that it becomes boring. I bought this book because I am considering moving to Austin from Northern California, and every question I have is answered in this book. Specific descriptions of individual neighborhoods, indoor and outdoor activities, annual events, arts and music, food, and the list goes on.

I cannot reccommend this book strongly enough.

Best book about Austin
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-31
This book is full of details and descriptions. Everything you could want to know about Austin. Great for travellers as well as prospective residents (has chapters about neighborhoods and schools). The CitySmart guide is a good supplement, but not nearly as thorough.

Texas
Intoxication: Heathcliff on Powell Street
Published in Paperback by Slough Press (2006)
Author: Hedwig Gorski
List price:
New price: $13.50
Used price: $10.00

Average review score:

After 1978, Gorski invents the name for performance poetry
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
I am a fan of Hedwig Gorski's work since I started researching performance poetry as a historical predecessor to Slam poetry. I think I found something better than slam, and it is performance poetry. I have to recommend this book along with a CD I link here of the someone who is called the original performance poet, Hedwig Gorski, because she made up the term to publicize what she started doing in the late 1970s. This is a great book that shows how she started with what she called in a recent interview as "neo-verse drama" coupled with "conceptual art." You don't hear about literary artists doing anything this new and daring anymore. Read this book if you want to read about something so bizarre and unexpected, that it will spin your ideas about poetry around 360 degrees. The book reminds me of a real-world Harry Potter.

I also recommend this CD of spoken word by Hedwig Gorski because it shows how she evolved what she was doing in the book as a literary performance artist into what she began to call performance poetry. Here is the link.
The Performance Poetry of Hedwig Gorski and East of Eden Band: Send in the Clown (Poets Media Projects)

The band work like that in the "Clown" CD comes after the performance poetry theater events archived in the book. The book presents a look of pure creativity in its most inventive form. If anything, the CD sounds tamer to be much more radio friendly and even entertaining. She comes "as close to singing as anyone can without really singing," a playwright wrote of Gorski vocals. It is really something that should be part of every slam poet's collection. Has anyone been thinking that all the slam poets are beginnig to sound the same? How about Def Poets? Are they all beginnning to deliver the same style of poems and voice inflections? I think so. That is why performance poetry is so much better than slam. Especially the one and only original performance poet, so-called, on the CD. Gotta hear it and own it before the CDs disappear. Really a treat.

So buy the book. It is a must have, signed and numbered. I have it and think it will become one of the most valuable items in my alternative poetry/art collection, a huge part to document, sort of, my collection of audio poetry. I have them all, Ginsberg, Dylan Thomas, Giorno, but this is much more rare and post-Beat/pre-slam. But buy both the CD I linked to and this book to understand how performance poetry evolved from Gorski's "neo-verse drama" literary performance art if you are a collector and maybe poetry historian. Better 'n slam and regular poetry.

Hey, they should make a movie from this book!

Heathcliff Rises Above the Congressional Witch Hunt of Avant Garde Artists
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
What ever happened to the American avant-garde? To the freedom of interdisciplinary aesthetics? Avant-gardists, artists, poets and dramatists, are tucked away in academia. They used to be out and available in public before the Congressional witch hunts designed to demolish the National Endowment for the Arts. Republicans have been after NEA funds for military efforts since the 1980s. This book has been waylaid by this sublimation and archived before it ever made it to press, rumors have it. Wow! Here it is. Some of these people have died, but the work is alive and full of the spirit of experimentalism and American optimism and democracy of the sort unknown to the neo-cons. It is all-inclusive and promotes an egalitarian search for selfhood. That is probably why the nod to Romanticism--intoxication from the earnest and honest search for self. Austin, Texas, was once among the "bohemian trade routes" artists and musicians traveled between coasts. What a flashback to an American experience by American dreamers of the type retro-government tried to destroy. Avant-garde and experimental art are not dirty words except to those who exclude all except for the puritanical, anti-democratic, morally convoluted, politicians supporting the Bush presidency. Save America from their nightmare. Return democracy to the United States. (This political rant is not part of the book in any way. It reflects my own disappointments about our nation's current direction.) Anyway, taste the feelings of pure enthusiasm and honesty that prevailed before art was shackled or compartmentalized. All repressive regimes imprison or execute the artists, writers, intellectuals, and free-thinkers first. Where has the American avant-garde gone? Compare Heathcliff to what is labeled "experimental" or "avant-garde" since then.
We need a cultural revolution in USA. I read an article that called Hedwig Gorski the "American Mayakovsky." Both so-called "beloved" endearing but bewildering personalities, or something like that, it said.
This chapbook, Polish Gypsy with Ghost: And Special Guests, with audio record contains Roxy Gordon (Choctow Indian) with his band, Joy Cole, WOW!, and Hedwig Gorski in 1980s with East of Eden. It is a great find and progresses a few of the bunch in INTOXICATION outside of Austin city limits, and it is great to hear their voices. Joy Cole must have been the bomb. Wish there were more of her material avaialable, but I can't locate it. I would have loved being a fly on the wall when these two women, Gorski and Cole, were together!!!!!
Polish Gypsy with Ghost (Poets Media Projects, Vol. 4)

Real People and Actual Events
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-26
The portrait of Austin, Texas, is much different than the one many people might have. So this is the milieu that spawned Stevie Ray Vaughn, Lucinda Williams, Daniel Johnston, Townes van Zandt, and Hedwig Gorski. Reality proves to be crazier than fiction. Fiction is so much more organized than this "pedestrian" theater art group was.

I was in conflict, fluctuating between agreeing with Plato's criticism of art and poetry, and contrasting the surreal mind set of the real folks and their bizarre ambitions and activities with other types of delusions that rule our lives. The whimsy of art and the possibility for stark honesty seem to have disappeared in social striving for political correctness over these past three decades. What a mind-trip it is to go back to these "innocent" times, post-hippie-dippie but pre-Reagan, when honest soul searching happened using invented methodology. I guess that is what they mean by Conceptual Art. We probably need the magic of exercising our free wills fully and the ideal of deep soul searching that late 19th century Romanticism was about. That is definitely a positive type of intoxication.

Reading the book makes me examine where I go wrong and how America got here from there in 1978. The sense of wonder, invention, and complete personal freedom seems almost vanished. Whether what the book documents is valid art, though, could be in question. Isn't art more than manifesting a concept? I have always wondered, too, if all experimental theater can be classified as avant-garde. The book doesn't really settle into any genre or category completely. It's verse drama, poetry, memoir, essay, performance art, literary art, and some theory. It also includes a short-short story. The Afterward defines Conceptual Art, but I still don't understand what that is.

The real people come through honestly, though, and their stories bring up divine ideas to investigate while being entertained and bewildered by this so-called cast of characters. They lived more intensely and honestly during the months the book documents than most of us dare. I would like to know what they are up to now. When is the sequel coming out?

Texas
It's a Dog's Life / Murder in the Middle Pasture (Hank the Cowdog 3, 4)
Published in Audio Cassette by Texas Monthly Press (1995-01)
Author: John R. Erickson
List price: $26.95
New price: $4.99
Used price: $2.98

Average review score:

Your kid will love these...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-03
Great story for kids. My 8 year old son loved listening to these stories and now wants me to buy more "Hank" stories for us to listen to on the way to school.

The Case of the Vampire Cat
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
The case of the Vampire Cat is one of our family's top three Hank stories. We often listen to it on car trips. Our boys are 18 and 11 now, and they've both been listening to that story most of their lives. We never get tired of it.

Hank Audio Pack #4
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
In this two-book audio pack, you can listen to two more adventures from Hank, that hilarious cowdog. In the first story, Hank book #5: Faded Love, Hank goes to visit his One True Love, Beulah the collie. In the second, book #6: Let Sleeping Dogs Lie, Hank must find out who's been murdering chickens before he gets blamed. I wouldn;t miss them!

Texas
Katie Dee & Kaite Haw: Letters from a Texas Farm Girl
Published in Paperback by Defiant Pr (2003-10)
Author: Joe Reese
List price: $8.95
New price: $8.95
Used price: $7.95

Average review score:

A nostalgic journey you won't want to miss!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-23
This is a book you will share with friends and revisit time after time. Few books make me laugh aloud--this one did. Don't let this one pass you by.

A+ coming-of-age book starring a very perceptive young girl
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-15
Absorbing and adventurous reflections of life on a Texas farm as told by a precocious adolescent girl to her best (same-named) girlfriend. Have fun remembering drive-in movies, first dances, second best friends, and the first time driving the tractor!

Charming for Children and Adults-Texas Life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-17
This is a funny and realistic view of life in a small Texas town as seen through the eyes of a young girl writing to a friend. Can be read by children 9 and up. Best loved by mothers who remember when. Highly recommend.

Texas
Killing the Hidden Waters
Published in Paperback by University of Texas Press (2003-11-01)
Author: Charles Bowden
List price: $17.95
New price: $9.75
Used price: $3.22
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

Killing the Hidden Waters: Charles Bowden
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-01
I came across Charles Bowden's name while reading "God's Middle Finger" and decided to track down some of his works. Started out with The Secret Forest, moved on to Desierto: Memories of the Future, and next to Killing the Hidden Waters. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the American Southwest, its indigenous peoples, the politics of water and development past and future, conservation, or ecology in general. As the cover quote from Edward Abbey states, "Charles Bowden is the best social critic and environmental journalist now working in the American Southwest."

Best book about
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-19
Although Marc Reisner's "Cadillac Desert" is the most encyclopedic book about the West and its problems with water, this book actually gets closer to the bone of what's wrong with the way we in the US live in our desert climes. The book focuses first on how the O'odham and Pima indian cultures managed to live sustainably in the Sonoran Desert with its unpredictable and rare water flows. While I doubt that many of us but the most idealistic and romantic would want to live the life of these peoples, there is a certain genius in the ways they made the land and its water work for them that we could do well to learn from. Bowden contrasts this with the civilization the European cultures came and built during the last 150 years, a civilization built on "mining" the ice-age aquifers so rapidly that they will soon be drained once and for all. Having turned the plains to a dust bowl, will we just pack up and move on as we always have in the past?

In his later books, Bowden's bitter spleen often spills uncontrollably from his pen, but his tone here is much more restrained. In "Waters," his voice is almost scholarly scholarly and tinged with sad wisdom. This is a great book, and one that deserves far more readers.

Best book about the West and its troubles with water
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-19
Although Marc Reisner's "Cadillac Desert" is the most encyclopedic book about the West and its problems with water, this book actually gets closer to the bone of what's wrong with the way we in the US live in our desert climes. The book focuses first on how the O'odham and Pima indian cultures managed to live sustainably in the Sonoran Desert with its unpredictable and rare water flows. While I doubt that many of us but the most idealistic and romantic would want to live the life of these peoples, there is a certain genius in the ways they made the land and its water work for them that we could do well to learn from. Bowden contrasts this with the civilization the European cultures came and built during the last 150 years, a civilization built on "mining" the ice-age aquifers so rapidly that they will soon be drained once and for all. Having turned the plains to a dust bowl, will we just pack up and move on as we always have in the past?

In his later books, Bowden's bitter spleen often spills uncontrollably from his pen, but his tone here is much more restrained. In "Waters," his voice is almost scholarly scholarly and tinged with sad wisdom. This is a great book, and one that deserves far more readers.

Texas
L Is for Lone Star: A Texas Alphabet (Alphabet Series)
Published in Hardcover by Sleeping Bear Press (2001-09-19)
Author: Carol Crane
List price: $17.95
New price: $9.00
Used price: $6.13

Average review score:

Fabulous book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-10
This is such a wonderful book! I commend the author for filling it with all kinds of wonderful, educational, and entertaining facts about Texas. It is a great teaching tool and I would recommend it for the classroom as well. Each letter is presented in verse, which children AND adults retain much easier. Being a proud Texan already, this book helped many elements of our wonderful state resurface in my memory as well as teaching me a few new things to additionally be proud of. If I was a teacher, I would want this entire series in my classroom. I give 5 LONE STARS to the author and illustrator!

Packed With Texas Trivia - Highly Recommended!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-07
This book is part of Sleeping Bear Press' State Alphabet series. Now, some of these books need some liberal stretching to get 26 verses of relevant information. Not this one, though. We're talking Texas here. If there's one state that could easily fill an ABC book, it's the Lone Star State.

Carol Crane has done a very nice job selecting a wide range of Texas locations, events, and people to use in this book. Besides the usual suspects, such as the Alamo, the book mentions Scott Joplin, armadillos, Quanah Parker, Spindletop, Dr. Pepper, and, of course, bluebonnets.

The book's layout, like that of the others in this series, features a very interesting two-tiered system. The main flow of the book is carried by a series of 4-line verses, one per letter. This portion is suitable for reading to pre-readers. Along the sides of each page, relevant factoids are given, further illuminating the main verse. This makes the book hold appeal for older readers, probably even up to 4th or 5th graders.

Alan Stacy's well-drawn illustrations bring the subjects to life, especially for younger readers.

I found this book to be a great way to deliver a working knowledge of Texas. Highly Recommended.

Beautiful Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-13
I am going to use this next year with my students. They will then make a Texas ABC book of their own. I love it!


Books-Under-Review-->Sports-->Gymnastics-->Artistic-->Clubs and Schools-->United States-->Texas-->63
Related Subjects: College and University
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