A Good Guy With a Gun vs. the National Rifle Association
A firearm-owning ER doctor who treats shooting victims in Houston argues, in a new book, for targeted reforms to help relieve our epidemic of weapon-related deaths.
A firearm-owning ER doctor who treats shooting victims in Houston argues, in a new book, for targeted reforms to help relieve our epidemic of weapon-related deaths.
The author will end the Highway 59 trilogy with a new novel, Guide Me Home, while working with her sister Tembi Locke on a TV adaptation.
The state poet laureate just won a fellowship, proving there IS money in poetry, Mom.
'The Devil Behind the Badge,' by Rick Jervis, raises questions about the motives of Juan David Ortiz, who killed four women in 2018.
In "We Burn Daylight," star-crossed lovers narrate a story of romance amid a standoff between a religious cult and the law.
The Federal Theatre Project launched the careers of Arthur Miller and Orson Welles, and brought free plays to millions. Martin Dies killed it off, and the political tactics he used are still alive today.
A new biography tells the inspiring story of a Texas Green Beret who fought for years before his heroism was finally recognized.
The noted ob-gyn has the attention of millions on social media, where she loves “taking on the haters.”
The Texas ob-gyn offers her top tips for navigating menopause.
In this adapted excerpt from her new book, ‘This Is Going To Hurt,’ Bekah McNeel explores the intersection of theology and abortion rights.
I’d always dreamed of kayaking down a Texas river to the Gulf of Mexico. After my stroke, a long paddling voyage seemed impossible—but dreams are stubborn things.
Texas Country Reporter tags along with the photographer whose latest book highlights the gothic beauty of southern swamps.
Two years after the U.S. Supreme Court's Dobbs decision, two new books explore the untold stories of how it happened—and its impact.
In this adapted excerpt from her new book, ‘We Were Illegal,’ Jessica Goudeau looks at the life of a relative who, she learned, was not the heroic figure of family lore.
An Austin actor keeps tearing through Hollywood, a fortysomething El Pasoan keeps writing your teen’s favorite songs, and a columnist at a Houston newspaper keeps spinning yarns.
Amid a bumper crop of generation-spanning novels from Texas Latinas, Marcela Fuentes’s unflinching "Malas" stands out.
After 53 years, Antiquarian Book Mart, on Broadway, has shut its doors. It’s the latest change in an area of the Alamo City that is experiencing the push and pull of nostalgia and progress.
This Texas author’s novels of romance and trauma made her one of the best-selling writers of all time, and her first film adaptation hits theaters this summer. Readers wonder what’s next. So does she.
In We Were the Universe, Parsons builds a world that feels deeply rooted in Texas culture, but mercifully devoid of any old-school, clichéd depictions of the state.
“Spirit in a Bottle” highlights the Austin brand’s history and rise to prominence alongside cocktail and infusion recipes.
Another dark comedy from Richard Linklater, a report on the ideological battles plaguing public schools, and an exhibition of modern collages by Black artists.
He hung out with Langston Hughes and wrote verses inspired by his Galveston roots, but he’s largely been forgotten. A new biography seeks to change that.
‘Texas, Being: A State of Poems’ has something for everyone.
At eighty, the musician-artist-playwright is still doing things his way. (He is worried about the year 4024, though.)
The HarperCollins imprint, curated by Cynthia Leitich Smith, is on a mission to ensure that Native kids “see themselves as heroes of their own life stories.”
The law, which would have required booksellers to rate every book they sold to school libraries, was overturned by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
In this trio of novels, the past and present—or, in one case, the near-future—intertwine in a revealing manner.
In this original short story, a San Antonio divorcé receives a series of missives from his elderly mother that hint at a past he never knew about.
Texas's Defiance Press publishes conservative broadsides that border on fiction. But it’s the company’s actual novels that are truly strange.
Our state’s legacy of great writing has a publishing tradition to match. Here are a handful of the dozens of outfits producing great books in Texas.
An original broadsheet announcing the fall of the Alamo, the first book published in Texas, and other stuff that Phil Collins will probably buy.
In their new book ‘Chokeholds,’ researchers argue Lee Harvey Oswald was just one piece of a sprawling conspiracy—one that other investigators claim never existed at all.
‘The Madstone,’ a sequel to 2018’s ‘The Which Way Tree,’ is a compelling read on its own terms.
Who wouldn’t want to drink a Murder on the Orient Espresso martini?
For me, the experience of shopping at Kindred Stories is more than just a transaction.
Much of the joy of a great used bookstore is in discovering the messages scribbled in a paperback’s margins.
To celebrate the enduring power of the Texas bookstore, we’re publishing odes to shops old and new, essays by some of our favorite novelists, conversations with booksellers, and more.
A Texas legend finally gets top billing, Willie spills on his songs, the Black Pumas return, and Sugar Land hosts Honeyland.
"Bookseller" was one of the Pulitzer winner's core identities, and at Booked Up, it showed.
Sorry, New York. The largest U.S. publisher of literature in translation, plus a thriving global books scene, resides in the Metroplex.
A new movie adaption, starring Nicolas Cage, may finally bring the 1960 novel ‘Butcher’s Crossing’ the fame it deserves—right when we need to heed its message.
At nearly fifty years old, the feminist bookstore remains a safe haven for those seeking a place to process the world.
The independent bookstores of sixties and seventies San Antonio, Houston, and Dallas created community and opened whole new worlds for Texans.
From McAllen to Austin, indie bookstores have provided Fernando A. Flores with far more than just reading material.
COVID put Texas author Katie Gutierrez’s book launch for her debut novel on hold. This San Antonio independent bookstore came to the rescue.
Whether you prefer to read Harry Potter with a stack of pancakes or ‘Jane Eyre’ with a charcuterie board, you’re encouraged to stick around awhile at these bookshop bistros.
Houston’s Murder by the Book serves up bloodshed with a smile.
We scoured the state for every indie we could find. Texas readers, you’re going to want to bookmark.
And not just in big cities—in suburbs and in small towns, new shops are serving up classics, cocktails, and community.
When I wrote my YA novel, I hoped to inspire teens to figure out their beliefs around complicated political questions. But amid a wave of book bans, my book could get prohibited from school shelves.