Category Archives: Library

The Pavarotti of the Plains

TFG has a nice video clip of Big Don Walser in concert, at his yodeling best. Reminds me when he sang at a friend’s wedding and later when Mrs. Charm and I saw him at little club in South Austin. Then he was so obese that he waddled getting onto the small stage. His almost-equally obese wife sat nearby. TFG says we make too much of DW’s overweight, but he might be with us yet if he’d taken it more seriously himself.

Behave yourself

That’s the slogan on the mousepad Sister Mary Martha sells for $15 on the blog “Ask Sister Mary Martha,” a sort of tough-love Dear Abby. (And, quite possibly, the only nun in Marina del Ray.)

If you’re not in the market for a mousepad with the face of a Roman Catholic nun on it (whatever it says) I think you will nevertheless like the blog as much as I do. Just don’t expect any sympathy. SMM is tougher than some rabbis I know.

The End of the Straight and Narrow

This absorbing collection of nine short stories has two common themes: Texas as a homeland and Christianity as a balm and a barb. Some of the characters in the first four stories grew up with Jesus and never leave Him, however they may struggle at times with the organized church.

The narrator son in the Houston family of the second part’s five stories (which comprise a novella) encounters Jesus late, after his blind and depressed mother has driven his scientist father into the bed of her longtime caretaker. In his remorse, as his marriage is collapsing, the father seeks counseling and becomes Born Again.

Thus he becomes what many devout believers are in America today, and particularly the evangelical Christians of the stories in the book’s first part: outsiders in a secular society which either mocks the expression of their values, attacks them as subversive, or ignores them altogether. Author David McGlynn comes at it all as a skilled reporter, neither endorsing nor condemning, but finely detailing the challenges and the rewards of a way of life that increasingly is being lost to us.

Cowpunchers on strike?

“On this day in 1883, many Texas cowboys went on strike against their
bosses, absentee ranchers. The cowboys’ grievances, however, were
against developments that proved permanent. As closed-range ranching
wiped out the previous open-range industry, some of the cowboys’ traditional perks were denied them. No longer could they brand mavericks, keep small herds of their own, or receive part of their pay in calves. The strike mustered some 300 cowboys at its peak strength, but after 2 1/2 months the work stoppage was so weakened that the May roundup occurred without incident. The last press mention of the strike was in the Dodge City Times for May 10, 1883.”

Adelsverein: The Gathering

This is a dandy historical novel of the 1840s German settlement of the Texas Hill Country which I recommend with caveats. I was familiar with the basic facts but learned a few things, such as the details of Baron Meuesbach’s peace treaty with the Comanches. It was unique in Texas and more or less held until the murderous tribe was exterminated by the U.S. Army. I also didn’t know how inept the pre-Meusebach Verein leaders were or that they employed their own uniformed soldiers to protect the settler families.

As a two-time indie author, I finally realized that it had been a long time since I had read someone else’s indie book. I figured Hayes (the blogosphere and Milblogging’s “Sgt. Mom”) and her Adelsverein trilogy was the best place to start. It was a good decision. This first book paints an epic in satisfying old-fashioned style that effectively lures the reader on.

Unfortunately, Hayes leaves almost nothing to a reader’s imagination. That can grate on folks raised on movies and television. Unlike readers of the 19th century, we don’t need exhaustive description of major and minor actors. I also could have done without all the adverbs. Seemingly every speech is characterized, rather than trusting to the context to convey the meaning. Despite those annoyances, the main characters seem real and lovable and their tragedies and joys won my empathy and spurred my curiosity to find out what would happen to them next.

The typos and misspellings, by my count on 46 of the book’s 365 pages, do slow things down as you try to puzzle out the author’s intention. Surely, most of them could have been avoided, and a second edition to fix them is warranted. However, Hayes is sufficiently talented and her story so well crafted that I’ve bought the second installment, “The Sowing.” I want to find out how the Beckers and the Steinmetzs fare in the turbulent Civil War years. Tragedy ahead, I expect. I’ll be hoping to find that the proofreading has improved.

J.E.B.’s LeMat

I met a young astronomer years ago who was descended from Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart. “So where was he?” I asked the scientist. He knew immediately what I was referring to. He replied: “We should have won.” I said if we had he would most likely be a farmer and not an astronomer as there would be no call for astronomy. I do like this commemoration, 10-shot LeMat, .44 cal ball and .65 cal shotgun combined. A working copy of which you can reserve for a mere $3,395. But it’s really too pretty to shoot.

Via TOCWOC –A Civil War Blog.

Bob Wills is still the king

Buscolor

There’s a new 10-disc set of the famous Western Swing outfit’s work, reviewed in Rolling Stone. And these MP3 clips. Play my favorite “San Antonio Rose.” They also have a web site. And see this profile of Wills’ famous onetime fiddler Johnny Gimble.

Via Will Howard’s Texas Bookshelf.