Check Mates
Katy Vine checks up on the UT-Dallas chess team.
Katy Vine joined the editorial department of Texas Monthly in 1997 and became a staff writer in 2002. As a general assignment reporter, she has written dozens of features on a range of topics, including rocket scientist Franklin Chang Díaz, hip-hop legend Bun B, barbecue pitmasters, cult leader Warren Jeffs, refugees in Amarillo, the moon landing, a three-person family circus, chess prodigies, a woman who kidnapped the Kilgore Rangerettes director and her daughter, an accountant who embezzled $17 million from a fruitcake company, and a con man who crashed cars, yachts, and planes for insurance money. Her stories have been anthologized in Best American Sports Writing and Best Food Writing. Her feature story about a West Texas sting operation was the inspiration for the 2012 television series The Client List.
Katy Vine checks up on the UT-Dallas chess team.
By Katy Vine
Where are the best places to eat barbecue in Texas? Six years ago we published a highly subjective—and hotly debated— list of our fifty favorite joints, and now we’ve gone back for seconds. Ten intrepid souls drove more than 21,000 miles in search of 2003’s worthiest ‘cue. Here’s what they
Forty-nine years of post oak coals in the pit have smoke-cured the building, which previously housed a ladies’ basketball court and a grocery market. Louie moved in with his barbecue business in 1959; his son, Bobby, took over more than three decades ago, but not a thing has suffered from
By Katy Vine
Bronzes by Remington and Russell in Orange, Quanah Parker’s trail bonnet in Canyon: Ten spaces that excel at the art of exhibition.
By Katy Vine
The pitmaster at the well-regarded JMueller BBQ trailer in Austin was fired by his sister, who also filed a police report accusing him of theft.
By Katy Vine
The man behind the booth at the Ganado Theater.
By Katy Vine
Historic downtown Galveston
By Katy Vine
Samir, now an 18-year-old college student, weighs in on this year's Scripps National Spelling Bee.
By Katy Vine
The Texas State Championship 42 Domino Tournament is in Hallettsville this weekend, and members of the Austin 42 Club, the largest league in the state, prepare for the big game.
By Katy Vine
A peek at the internal FLDS documents that the state used to convict Warren Jeffs.
By Katy Vine
When Warren Jeffs fired his attorneys and decided to represent himself in his sexual assault trial, many predicted, accurately, that he would fail miserably. Few realized just what a wild show he would put on.
By Katy Vine
The Civil War may be 150 years old, but that doesn’t mean it can’t still stir up a fuss (Confederate license plate, anyone?). Just ask one of the hundreds of very accurately uniformed reenactors who descend on Jefferson every year to die for the cause.
By Katy Vine
Carrying on the legacy of the legendary musician Steve Jordan isn’t easy, especially when you’re only 22 years old and blind. But Juanito Castillo is too busy reinventing the conjunto accordion to care.
By Katy Vine
Huey P. Meaux, one of the most successful and significant record producers in Texas history, died last weekend at age 82. He leaves a legacy marked by brilliant songs and some very bad decisions.
By Katy Vine
How a mild-mannered database analyst from Dallas became the undisputed king of extreme competitive deep-frying in Texas—which is to say, the world.
By Katy Vine
Our quiz shouldn’t be hard, so long as you’ve been paying attention. You have been paying attention, right?
By Katy Vine
Can new research predict which soldiers will suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder—and which won’t?
By Katy Vine
Susan Hyde’s children were constantly in and out of the hospital with one illness or another. But were they the ones who were sick?
By Katy Vine
The child custody battle between the State of Texas and a fundamentalist Mormon sect prompted many people to wonder how 437 kids could have been ripped away from their parents. When the criminal trials of a dozen sect members got under way this month, the question became, Was it really
By Katy Vine
On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin made history as the first humans to set foot on the surface of the moon. Forty years later, the researchers, astronauts, engineers, scientists, and NASA officials who made the voyage possible remember the day the Eagle landed.
By Katy Vine
Bob Hudgins, director of the Texas Film Commission, talks to Katy Vine about the “Waco” controversy, tax incentives, and how to get your movie made in Texas.
By Katy Vine
Location: The Frio, outside LeakeyWhat You’ll Need: Inner tube, groceriesI was promised no mosquitoes. The little buggers had just started to attack back home in Austin, and as I smacked my first one of the season against the wall (making a mess but impressing my husband and
By Katy Vine
For Steve Kemble, having as good a time as humanly possible as often as humanly possible is very serious business.
By Katy Vine
After 118 years, Lubbock finally appears ready to allow liquor stores inside the city limits—unless a shutter salesman and a handful of Baptists can turn back the clock.
By Katy Vine
The full-time pre-K bill seems like a slam dunk. The price tag: $300 million.
By Katy Vine
Ninety-four percent of Texas high school students receive abstinence-only education. More than half of these teens are losing their virginity. So what do the majority of Texans really want their kids to know about sex?
By Katy Vine
So Raising Sand, the collaborative album between Robert Plant and Alison Kraus, produced by Fort Worth native T Bone Burnett, cleaned house with five trophies at Sunday night’s Grammys. Was anyone besides me not surprised? I guess it could have been a disaster, with all the egos involved, but anything
By Katy Vine
The El Paso City Council may override the mayor’s veto to create a debate on the current U.S. drug policies. In these interviews, the mayor, council members, and others explain their views.
By Katy Vine
The reason so many Texans testified in favor of strong language supporting evolution in the TEKS is because they’re having to play defense and they’re losing.
By Katy Vine
Mack was born and raised in Galveston, where he has been a U.S. Postal Service employee for 28 years. As the local union president, he helped coordinate letter carriers’ efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike.To be honest with you, I never believed in my wildest dreams that I’d be
As told to Texas Monthly and Katy Vine
Find out by taking our quiz.
By Katy Vine
Texas receives more federal funding for abstinence education than any other state. But is teaching kids not to have sex the same as sex education?
By Katy Vine
Dave Hickey on being an art critic.
By Katy Vine
The future according to third-graders.
By Katy Vine
What Samir Patel learned in five years of not winning the national spelling bee (other than the root words of “eremacausis”).
By Katy Vine
The CEO of Blue Bell gives us the scoop.
By Katy Vine
How Dirk Fowler became the state’s latest, greatest poster artist.
By Katy Vine
A pro at helping cons.
By Katy Vine
Sixth Street and Lamar Boulevard, Austin.
By Katy Vine
Martha Josey on the basics of barrel racing.
By Katy Vine
At the Giddings State School, violent teenagers come to terms with their horrific crimes—and learn how to avoid committing them again—through role-playing exercises in a jailhouse version of group therapy. This is what your tax dollars are paying for? Well, it works. For a while, at least.
By Katy Vine
Will the upscale shoppers of Plano really buy what Wal-Mart is selling?
By Katy Vine
How the fire to end all fires obliterated Ringgold—and how residents of the tiny North Texas town are putting their lives back together.
By Katy Vine
The prison affected me personally. I grew up parking cars at the prison rodeo. I had a stepfather who was a prison guard.
By Katy Vine
For going on five years, my admiration has grown for the weekly paper in the tiny Panhandle town of Miami (above). The New York Times it ain’t, but it tells me everything I could ever want to know about local births and deaths, windblown mail, bad potholes, and good yards.
By Katy Vine
As mythical creatures go, Bigfoot is right up there with the Loch Ness Monster and the Abominable Snowman. But in Jefferson, the search for the hairy, hulking beast with the, er, big feet is big business—and deadly serious.
By Katy Vine
Bobbi Jo and Jennifer were young, in love, and on the road, with the wind at their backs and a happy future ahead of them. All that stood in their way was a dead body back in Mineral Wells.
By Katy Vine
A one-on-one with Brooklyn Pope reveals her to be—off the court, at least—a fairly typical fifteen-year-old girl. But when the game clock starts, she’s the future of women’s basketball. Maybe basketball, period.
By Katy Vine
From humble Oak Cliff roots did a hip intellectual giant grow. In this oral history, friends and fans remember the late Grover Lewis, one of the great magazine writers of our day.
By Katy Vine
Meet the 22-year-old hooker who, with her fellow “massage therapists,” scandalized Odessa
By Katy Vine