
A Day in the Life of Rick Perry
Photographer Peter Yang captures the candid, behind-the-scenes moments in a day in the life of the governor.
Photographer Peter Yang captures the candid, behind-the-scenes moments in a day in the life of the governor.
A frank conversation about the accomplishments and the missteps over a fourteen-year gubernatorial career—from tort reform to his executive order on HPV—with the man who can claim the longest, and most powerful, tenure of any governor in Texas history (and also what’s next in 2016).
How did he perform in eight areas that are critical to the state? The grade book is now open.
After Ana Trujillo was arrested in the bludgeoning death of her lover, she hired lawyer Jack Carroll to represent her in what became Houston’s splashiest trial of the spring. Did I mention that Carroll is my brother-in-law? And that the murder weapon was a cobalt-blue, five-and-a-half-inch stiletto?
How Johnny Gimble became one of the greatest fiddlers of all time—and showed me and my son a thing or two about playing music.
Our estimable advice columnist on bygone dining traditions, feeling homesick, and the indelible effects of living a mere five years in Texas.
Forty years later, I still can’t forget sitting in a darkened theater to watch “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” with the movie’s leading man.
A few days before her wedding, my daughter asked for marriage advice. But what’s there to say about the craziest institution around?
How one feline (and then a couple more, and then another) conquered both our hearts and our mice.
Journalist Chris Tomlinson delves into the parallel histories of two Texas families with the same last name—one black, one white.
Paul Burka on Rick Perry’s greatest feat: completely changing state government.
Some crazy stuff went down in the past thirty days. Here are a handful of headlines you may have missed.
What to hear, read, and watch this month to achieve maximum Texas literacy.
Not only has Art Briles made Baylor’s football program successful, he’s made it hip.
“New towns are springing up so rapidly in Texas that even the people of the State seem at a loss to keep track of them. Hence a stranger, traveling by rail, asking a Texas fellow-passenger the name of places being passed, will find from the response that a generic term has been adopted,
Robert Duncan, master of the Texas Senate, considers a new line of work.
The City of Austin Water Utility revealed that it is considering imposing a “drought fee” to help it make up for millions of dollars in lost revenue. The shortfall was caused, apparently, by customers’ heeding the utility’s demands to conserve water.
How New Braunfels’s prohibition on disposable containers changed tubing—and then didn’t.