Trillin on Texas
Articles and comic verse about the Lone Star State from the Thurber Prize winner: "What's not to love?" —Texas Monthly
 
Whether reporting for the New Yorker, penning comic verse and political commentary, or writing his memoirs, Calvin Trillin has bumped into Texas again and again. He insists it's not by design—"there has simply been a lot going on in Texas." Astute readers will note, however, that Trillin's family immigrated to America through the port of Galveston, and, after reading this book, many will believe the Lone Star State has somehow imprinted itself on his imagination.
 
Trillin on Texas gathers some of his best writing on subjects near to his heart—politics, true crime, food, and rare books among them—that also have a Texas connection. Indulging his penchant for making "snide and underhanded jokes about respectable public officials," he offers his signature sardonic take on the Bush dynasty and their tendency toward fractured syntax; a faux but quite believable LBJ speech; and wry portraits of assorted Texas county judges, small town sheriffs, and Houston immigration lawyers. He takes us on a pilgrimage to the barbecue joint that Texas Monthly named the best in Texas, and describes scouting for books with Larry McMurtry. He tells the stories of two teenagers who dug up half a million dollars in an ice chest, and of rare book dealer Johnny Jenkins, who was found floating in the Colorado River with a bullet wound in the back of his head. And he recounts how redneck movie reviewer "Joe Bob Briggs" fueled a war between Dallas's daily newspapers and pays tribute to two courageous Texas women who spoke truth to power: Molly Ivins and Sissy Farenthold. Sure to entertain both Texans and non-Texans, Trillin on Texas proves again that Trillin is one of America's shrewdest and wittiest observers.
1100160258
Trillin on Texas
Articles and comic verse about the Lone Star State from the Thurber Prize winner: "What's not to love?" —Texas Monthly
 
Whether reporting for the New Yorker, penning comic verse and political commentary, or writing his memoirs, Calvin Trillin has bumped into Texas again and again. He insists it's not by design—"there has simply been a lot going on in Texas." Astute readers will note, however, that Trillin's family immigrated to America through the port of Galveston, and, after reading this book, many will believe the Lone Star State has somehow imprinted itself on his imagination.
 
Trillin on Texas gathers some of his best writing on subjects near to his heart—politics, true crime, food, and rare books among them—that also have a Texas connection. Indulging his penchant for making "snide and underhanded jokes about respectable public officials," he offers his signature sardonic take on the Bush dynasty and their tendency toward fractured syntax; a faux but quite believable LBJ speech; and wry portraits of assorted Texas county judges, small town sheriffs, and Houston immigration lawyers. He takes us on a pilgrimage to the barbecue joint that Texas Monthly named the best in Texas, and describes scouting for books with Larry McMurtry. He tells the stories of two teenagers who dug up half a million dollars in an ice chest, and of rare book dealer Johnny Jenkins, who was found floating in the Colorado River with a bullet wound in the back of his head. And he recounts how redneck movie reviewer "Joe Bob Briggs" fueled a war between Dallas's daily newspapers and pays tribute to two courageous Texas women who spoke truth to power: Molly Ivins and Sissy Farenthold. Sure to entertain both Texans and non-Texans, Trillin on Texas proves again that Trillin is one of America's shrewdest and wittiest observers.
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Trillin on Texas

Trillin on Texas

by Calvin Trillin
Trillin on Texas

Trillin on Texas

by Calvin Trillin

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Overview

Articles and comic verse about the Lone Star State from the Thurber Prize winner: "What's not to love?" —Texas Monthly
 
Whether reporting for the New Yorker, penning comic verse and political commentary, or writing his memoirs, Calvin Trillin has bumped into Texas again and again. He insists it's not by design—"there has simply been a lot going on in Texas." Astute readers will note, however, that Trillin's family immigrated to America through the port of Galveston, and, after reading this book, many will believe the Lone Star State has somehow imprinted itself on his imagination.
 
Trillin on Texas gathers some of his best writing on subjects near to his heart—politics, true crime, food, and rare books among them—that also have a Texas connection. Indulging his penchant for making "snide and underhanded jokes about respectable public officials," he offers his signature sardonic take on the Bush dynasty and their tendency toward fractured syntax; a faux but quite believable LBJ speech; and wry portraits of assorted Texas county judges, small town sheriffs, and Houston immigration lawyers. He takes us on a pilgrimage to the barbecue joint that Texas Monthly named the best in Texas, and describes scouting for books with Larry McMurtry. He tells the stories of two teenagers who dug up half a million dollars in an ice chest, and of rare book dealer Johnny Jenkins, who was found floating in the Colorado River with a bullet wound in the back of his head. And he recounts how redneck movie reviewer "Joe Bob Briggs" fueled a war between Dallas's daily newspapers and pays tribute to two courageous Texas women who spoke truth to power: Molly Ivins and Sissy Farenthold. Sure to entertain both Texans and non-Texans, Trillin on Texas proves again that Trillin is one of America's shrewdest and wittiest observers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780292773400
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 03/29/2011
Series: Bridwell Texas History Series
Sold by: OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED - EBKS
Format: eBook
Pages: 197
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

About The Author
CALVIN TRILLIN has been a staff writer for the New Yorker since 1963. Since 1990, he has also been the Nation's "deadline poet." He is the author of twenty-seven books.

Hometown:

New York, New York

Date of Birth:

December 5, 1935

Place of Birth:

Kansas City, Missouri

Education:

B.A., Yale University, 1957

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • By Meat Alone
  • The Dynasticks
  • Mystery Money
  • Bad Language
  • Scouting Sleepers
  • Confessions of a Speechwriter/And Especially to Pickens, S.C.
  • Knowing Johnny Jenkins
  • If the Boot Fits . . .
  • New Cheerleaders
  • Whose Mines Are They?
  • Not Super-Outrageous
  • Three Texans in Six Lines
  • Making Adjustments
  • Presidential Ups and Downs: Washington Pundits Take Their Analytical Skills to the Ranch
  • The Life and Times of Joe Bob Briggs, So Far
  • One Texan in Eight Lines
  • Reformer
  • Molly Ivins, R.I.P.
  • Credits
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