Biography

138 stories

Babe Didrikson’s pioneering career as a woman golfer.
July 2011 by Prudence Mackintosh

Jeff Dunham speaks for himself.
November 2010 by Josh Eells

A memorable hour-long radio special based on the June issue of TEXAS MONTHLY, a co-production with KUT 90.5 FM.
June 2010

The story of the Commemorative Air Force and the Yellow Rose, a WWII  B-25 bomber.
January 2010

Kenny Thompson on planning Obama’s campaign events.
January 2009 Interview by John Spong

Andy Mullins, midway barker.
October 2008 As told to Jordan Breal

Only yesterday, it seems, my mother was taking me to visit colleges. A second later, here I am, enduring this rite of passage from the other side.
July 2008 by Mimi Swartz

Every family has its myths. Some are intended to reveal, and some are intended to conceal, and sometimes the intentions can get confused. The problem with myth, however, is that it can overpower history. That’s what happened in the case of my father, who died when I was four. Only when I finally learned the truth about him could I come to appreciate him as a real person.
June 2008 by Paul Burka

Whatever else you could say about him, he was who he was. He enjoyed a drink or three in daylight hours and had a tendency to grope first and ask questions later. But he was as revered as any pol before or since.
January 2008 by Jim Henderson and Dave McNeely

Today, many younger Texans may be inclined to think of Lady Bird Johnson as belonging entirely to the past. But if her demeanor and style seemed faintly anachronistic, the virtues instilled by her parents back in East Texas—practicality, thriftiness, good manners, and an open mind—made her remarkably effective as a first lady, more so than some of her “modern” successors.
September 2007 by Jan Jarboe Russell

What I’ve learned from Moe, Oscar, Flannery, George, Odette, and Roscoe.
May 2007 by Antonya Nelson

Russell Lee’s rarely seen Texas photographs reveal an artist at the peak of his powers of observation.
April 2007 by Michael Ennis

Saying good-bye to my dear Phyllis was the hardest thing I’ve ever done—and losing her so suddenly didn’t make it any easier. But I know I’ll see her again someday.
September 2006 by Gary Cartwright

And I am a woman rancher. Here’s what my life is like.
August 2006 As told to Katharyn Rodemann

Have you heard the good news? My career as a bit player in Hollywood continues apace.
June 2006 by Turk Pipkin

All I know for certain about religion is that the one my mother tried so hard to pass on to me just didn’t take.
December 2005 by Jan Reid

More than anything, we hated the moves, the long drives in a hot car with squabbling siblings, then getting to the new post and having to be the new kid all over again.
December 2005 by Michael Hall

At Westlake, even if your parents wouldn’t spring for Ralph Lauren, you could still work your way into the in crowd.
December 2005 by John Spong

People have an attitude about the Panhandle, as if living there is a hardship. To this day, they offer condolences when they learn where I’m from.
December 2005 Photographs and text by Wyatt McSpadden

My San Antonio was an overgrown small town, socially stratified and inbred, controlled by a handful of old, wealthy families.
December 2005 by Mimi Swartz

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