Chronicle of a Small Town
"I want to hear about such folks as my father and how he knows how to make cement, not by recipe, but by something in his bones. I want to hear how my grandfather learned to plow a straight furrow and why even older men always called him Mister. I want to know all of the reasons why, those years ago, my mother cried when the tomatoes in her garden twisted and died." Trying to find out such things, Jim Corder leads us through the ravines of the Croton Breaks, around to the back side of the Double Mountains, and through the streets of Jayton and Spur, as they are and as they used to be. He takes us right up to gaze at the Big Rock Candy Mountain, which, however, he can't tell us how to find since the day in 1937 when the State Highway Department made it into gravel. Fort Concho and Fort Phantom Hill, outhouses and feed mills, Col. Ranald Mackenzie and a lone Comanche brave, high school athletes and desperately lonely teachers, all come under his scrutiny and are hauntingly considered for their stories, their limitations, and the sense of place they afford. Nostalgia, wonderment, and a healthy and imaginative provincialism color the pages of this book, which is well illustrated with the author's own pen-and-ink sketches of the places and things he remembers. The vibrantly concrete details of daily existence in a bygone time in a remote and desolate area of Texas are startlingly juxtaposed with philosophical musings about the limitations all of us face in comprehending even that little bit of life we live. "Can poetry, or water, be found in West Texas?" Corder asks at one point. His answer-if such it be-makes it worth our getting lost with him in this journey of the heart and mind. JIM W. CORDER is a professor of English at Texas Christian University and the author of many articles and several books, including Lost in West Texas.
1102469881
Chronicle of a Small Town
"I want to hear about such folks as my father and how he knows how to make cement, not by recipe, but by something in his bones. I want to hear how my grandfather learned to plow a straight furrow and why even older men always called him Mister. I want to know all of the reasons why, those years ago, my mother cried when the tomatoes in her garden twisted and died." Trying to find out such things, Jim Corder leads us through the ravines of the Croton Breaks, around to the back side of the Double Mountains, and through the streets of Jayton and Spur, as they are and as they used to be. He takes us right up to gaze at the Big Rock Candy Mountain, which, however, he can't tell us how to find since the day in 1937 when the State Highway Department made it into gravel. Fort Concho and Fort Phantom Hill, outhouses and feed mills, Col. Ranald Mackenzie and a lone Comanche brave, high school athletes and desperately lonely teachers, all come under his scrutiny and are hauntingly considered for their stories, their limitations, and the sense of place they afford. Nostalgia, wonderment, and a healthy and imaginative provincialism color the pages of this book, which is well illustrated with the author's own pen-and-ink sketches of the places and things he remembers. The vibrantly concrete details of daily existence in a bygone time in a remote and desolate area of Texas are startlingly juxtaposed with philosophical musings about the limitations all of us face in comprehending even that little bit of life we live. "Can poetry, or water, be found in West Texas?" Corder asks at one point. His answer-if such it be-makes it worth our getting lost with him in this journey of the heart and mind. JIM W. CORDER is a professor of English at Texas Christian University and the author of many articles and several books, including Lost in West Texas.
19.95 In Stock
Chronicle of a Small Town

Chronicle of a Small Town

by Jim W. Corder
Chronicle of a Small Town

Chronicle of a Small Town

by Jim W. Corder

Paperback

$19.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 1-2 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

"I want to hear about such folks as my father and how he knows how to make cement, not by recipe, but by something in his bones. I want to hear how my grandfather learned to plow a straight furrow and why even older men always called him Mister. I want to know all of the reasons why, those years ago, my mother cried when the tomatoes in her garden twisted and died." Trying to find out such things, Jim Corder leads us through the ravines of the Croton Breaks, around to the back side of the Double Mountains, and through the streets of Jayton and Spur, as they are and as they used to be. He takes us right up to gaze at the Big Rock Candy Mountain, which, however, he can't tell us how to find since the day in 1937 when the State Highway Department made it into gravel. Fort Concho and Fort Phantom Hill, outhouses and feed mills, Col. Ranald Mackenzie and a lone Comanche brave, high school athletes and desperately lonely teachers, all come under his scrutiny and are hauntingly considered for their stories, their limitations, and the sense of place they afford. Nostalgia, wonderment, and a healthy and imaginative provincialism color the pages of this book, which is well illustrated with the author's own pen-and-ink sketches of the places and things he remembers. The vibrantly concrete details of daily existence in a bygone time in a remote and desolate area of Texas are startlingly juxtaposed with philosophical musings about the limitations all of us face in comprehending even that little bit of life we live. "Can poetry, or water, be found in West Texas?" Corder asks at one point. His answer-if such it be-makes it worth our getting lost with him in this journey of the heart and mind. JIM W. CORDER is a professor of English at Texas Christian University and the author of many articles and several books, including Lost in West Texas.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781603449885
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Publication date: 03/28/2012
Series: Wardlaw Books
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 8.30(w) x 5.50(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author


JIM W. CORDER was a professor of English at Texas Christian University and the author of many articles and several books, including Lost in West Texas.

Table of Contents

1 Subscribing to the Jayton Chronicle 3

2 Remembering Priorities 7

3 Memory Confounded 12

4 Confounded Memory 13

5 What Was on the Microfilm 15

6 Time Is Gone and History Is Uncertain 17

7 Methodology 18

8 Back to the Beginning, or to Very Little 26

9 Interlude: Where Are You, Jimmy? 31

10 Starting Over, Wanting to Know 32

11 Looking for What's Gone 41

12 Far Off 43

13 Fall Always Comes 43

14 Transients 47

15 Seeing and Not Seeing 47

16 Lost 49

17 Flowers 53

18 Far Off 53

19 Place of Which There is No Knowledge: How History Is Written 54

20 Transients 57

21 Far Off 58

22 Nineteen Thirty-four 58

23 Missing Issues 71

24 History Far Off 72

25 Nineteen Thirty-seven 73

26 Nineteen Thirty-eight 90

27 The Heroes Have Gone from the Grocery Store 105

28 Nineteen Thirty-nine 111

29 So Far, 1939 Is Over, and We Are Gone 124

30 Missing Issues 129

31 Far Geography 130

32 Nineteen Forty-two 136

33 The Saga of the Jayton Jaybirds, 1938-46, as Told in the Incomplete Files of the Jayton Chronicle and Modified by Failed Memory and Faulty Interpretation 145

34 Remember the Names 154

35 Nineteen Forty-three 155

36 Nineteen Forty-four 156

37 News Wanes 156

38 Blinders 165

39 Transients 169

40 Color and Distance in Kent County 171

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews