
The U.S.S. Texas, Once the World’s Most Formidable Battleship, Gets a Dramatic Makeover
The famously powerful dreadnought was hailed by Hemingway and played a key role in several famous battles.
The famously powerful dreadnought was hailed by Hemingway and played a key role in several famous battles.
Acre by acre, families have lost long-held property near Bryan and College Station—much of it to the efforts of two men who weaponized arcane documents to acquire plots potentially worth millions.
A celebration of beloved neighborhood restaurants—and the many folks who cover food for Texas Monthly.
In 1999 lawmakers radically altered the electricity marketplace. We can all breathe easier—literally—because of it.
Reader letters published in our November 2023 issue.
Found along Texas’s southwestern border, the creature has a mug only a mother could love.
After his murder in Dallas, our perception of what happened has been shaped by the pop culture—and subculture—it inspired.
She may be a Republican, but she doesn’t love vouchers (though she doesn’t think they’re the end of the world, either).
Plus, a harrowing vehicular encounter with a spear and a harrowing vehicular encounter with a cornfield.
Butterfly wings, tarantula legs, and “Frankenstein” beetles—the insect taxidermists of Pinned Ptera find the beauty in it all.
Karen Ramirez traverses vast Brewster County—a territory bigger than Connecticut—so her patients can finish their days at home.
As United Methodist congregations across the U.S. leave over LGBTQ inclusion and the interpretation of Scripture, one East Texas community is rent asunder.
HB 2127, which strips municipalities of regulatory authority, was intended to target liberal cities. So why are conservative mayors so upset?
A Texas legend finally gets top billing, Willie spills on his songs, the Black Pumas return, and Sugar Land hosts Honeyland.
Just a few minutes from the celebrated Rothko Chapel, the Chapel of St. Basil provides a spiritual respite.
Fort Worth is the center of pork belly innovation, and Brix Barbecue’s herby porchetta is just the latest example.
A veteran of many Sunset Limited trips to Alpine finally indulges in a private room and finds a lot to love. Especially the French toast.
More than twenty years after its founder died, Music of the Spheres continues to produce striking outdoor chimes.