
The Witness
For more than a decade, Michelle Lyons’s job required her to watch condemned criminals be put to death. After 278 executions, she won't ever be the same.
For more than a decade, Michelle Lyons’s job required her to watch condemned criminals be put to death. After 278 executions, she won't ever be the same.
Amber Venz was just a pretty Dallas girl with good taste and a blog, until she figured out something revolutionary: how to make money with every post. Meet the 27-year-old queen of a whole new fashion empire.
The joys and perils (but mostly joys) of being the nation’s first full-time barbecue editor.
And the Longhorns head football coach is ready to get out there and play ball.
It was just last year—amid spectacular losses and dramatic resignations—that the University of Texas saw its sports program go up in flames. As the new athletics director knows, a return to glory now rides on one person: him.
Our estimable advice columnist on camping by a river, shooting by a river, choosing what heels to wear (not by a river), and more.
Brian D. Sweany on taking the reins at Texas Monthly—and always carrying a pen.
When you live in the desert, waiting for rain requires almost irrational optimism. And maybe a curse word or two.
With its tight prose, waitress heroine, and stinging insight into urban life, Merritt Tierce’s debut marks an exciting turn in Texas literature.
Why did hunter-gatherers bury their arrow points on the tallest peak in the Davis Mountains?
What to hear, read, and watch this month to achieve maximum Texas cultural literacy.
Some crazy stuff went down in Texas in the past thirty days. Here are a handful of headlines you may have missed.
Kyleen Wright explains why HB 2 is good for women.
“Mr. Connelly, a farmer, living near Dallas, was bitten on the hand by a rattlesnake. . . . He went home and drank a quart of whiskey; split the back of a live chicken and applied it to the wound. The treatment was successful.”—Brenham Weekly Banner, August 9, 1878
Wilfredo Gutierrez, of Houston, pleaded guilty to fraudulently passing himself off as a veterinarian. His dozens of clients apparently appreciated his willingness to make house calls and his cut-rate fees for spaying and neutering.
Say what you want about their crumbling $60 million high school stadium. The people of Allen would build it all over again.
Gloriously novel flavors permeate the menu at Stephan Pyles’s latest venture, San Salvaje.
The favorite places of thirteen notable Texans—captured with artfulness and affection in the August issue by photographer Jeff Wilson—struck a sentimental chord with most readers. Or at least twelve of them did. The thirteenth, from cyclist Lance Armstrong, drew a decidedly critical stream of feedback. Said one Dallas-based