Guilty Pleasure
Kenny, we hardly knew ye. Okay, maybe we knew you too well. The jury, at least, seems to have pegged you just right. You too, Skilling.
Mimi Swartz, the author, with Sherron Watkins, of Power Failure, The Inside Story of the Collapse of Enron, is an executive editor of Texas Monthly. Previously, she was a staff writer at Talk, from April 1999 to April 2001, and a staff writer at the New Yorker from 1997 to 2001. Prior to joining the New Yorker, she worked at Texas Monthly for thirteen years. In 1996 Swartz was a finalist for two National Magazine Awards and won in the public interest category for “Not What the Doctor Ordered.” She was also a National Magazine Award finalist for her November 2005 issue story on tort reform, titled “Hurt? Injured? Need a Lawyer? Too Bad!” and won the 2006 John Bartlow Martin Award for Public Interest, Magazine Journalism, for the same story. In 2013 she won her second National Magazine Award (again in the category of public interest), for “Mothers, Sisters, Daughters, Wives,” a compelling look at the state of women's health care in Texas.
Over the years, Swartz’s work has appeared in Vanity Fair, Esquire, Slate, National Geographic, and the New York Times’ op-ed page and Sunday magazine. It has also been collected in Best American Political Writing 2006 and Best American Sportswriting 2007. She has been a member of the Texas Institute of Letters since 1994. Swartz grew up in San Antonio and graduated from Hampshire College, in Amherst, Massachusetts. She now lives in Houston with her husband, John Wilburn, and son, Sam.
Kenny, we hardly knew ye. Okay, maybe we knew you too well. The jury, at least, seems to have pegged you just right. You too, Skilling.
By Mimi Swartz
Whatever else you can say about it, the life and death of Bellaire High School junior Jonathan Finkelman is a tragic tale of drugs, money, race, and MySpace.
By Mimi Swartz
Scenes from the Enron reality show.
By Mimi Swartz
If the war is an unpleasant abstraction in the rest of the country, it’s omnipresent at Killeen Shoemaker, where many of the children of the enlisted men and women of Fort Hood are enrolled—and pray for peace every single day.
By Mimi Swartz
Last Call.
By Mimi Swartz
One evening Ike and Tina came over for dinner to my mom and dad’s house. Tina kissed me on the forehead before I went to bed.
By Mimi Swartz
My San Antonio was an overgrown small town, socially stratified and inbred, controlled by a handful of old, wealthy families.
By Mimi Swartz
What tort reform has done to Texans in need would be grounds for a lawsuit—if there still were any lawsuits.
By Mimi Swartz
The marriage of Baylor College of Medicine and Methodist Hospital should have been made in heaven—and until recently, it was. Their nasty breakup is a bell tolling for American medicine.
By Mimi Swartz
The fairy tale is long over, but reality hasn’t necessarily set in.
By Mimi Swartz
An exit interview with Hockaday’s headmistress.
By Mimi Swartz
All over the world, and all over this country, the Texas stereotype is mocked and maligned (so what else is new?). Does it matter, really, if everyone thinks we're fat, violent, prudish yahoos?
By Mimi Swartz
For Sharon Bush, membership in the world's most powerful family had its privileges. But as she discovered after her husband of 23 years—the brother of one president and the son of another—ended their marriage via e-mail, it can be revoked without warning.
By Mimi Swartz
The New England Patriots weren't the only winners at the Super Bowl. Houston won too, sort of.
By Mimi Swartz
So says my friend Jost Lunstroth, one of thousands of formerly successful Texans for whom unemployment is more than a statistic.
By Mimi Swartz
For forty years Nellie Connally has been talking about that day, when she was in that car and saw that tragedy unfold. She’s still talking—and now she’s writing too.
By Mimi Swartz
Will Houston's next mayor be White?
By Mimi Swartz
Executive editor Mimi Swartz talks about Wadih el-Hage and this month's cover story, "The Traitor Next Door."
By Mimi Swartz
His name was Wadih el-Hage. He had an American wife and American kids, a home in Arlington, a job at a tire store in Fort Worth, and a secret past that led straight to Osama bin Laden.
By Mimi Swartz
Mimi Swartz sizes up the legacy of Stanley Marcus.
By Mimi Swartz
Enron, rest in pieces.
By Mimi Swartz
Mimi Swartz finds fear at home.
By Mimi Swartz
The Houston-based energy giant put the pursuit of profits ahead of all other corporate goals, which fostered a climate of workaholism and paranoia. And that was only part of the problem.
By Mimi Swartz
The oil boom is long over, but he and other wildcatters are still thriving.
By Mimi Swartz
Mimi Schwartz considers the wake of Tropical Storm Allison.
By Mimi Swartz
Austinites thought the high-tech boom wouldn't change them, but it turned their city into something that more closely resembled Houston or Dallas in the golden eighties. Now they're paying the price.
By Mimi Swartz
Acapulco used to be a favorite destination of beautiful people from Texas and elsewhere. It still should be.
By Mimi Swartz
Master builders.
By Mimi Swartz
She’s got a secret.
By Mimi Swartz
Accessories for sexual adventurers, columns for your Craftsman bungalow, tasteful tables made from old manhole covers: You can find it all on this reborn Houston strip.
By Mimi Swartz
Dallas’ Sloane Simpson was a society queen who enchanted New York, seduced Mexico City, and turned Acapulco into a jet-set getaway. But when she died last year at age eighty, she was almost completely forgotten.
By Mimi Swartz
I thought I’d teach my young son’s Laotian friend about all the essentials of American culture, including Dr. Seuss. I just never imagined how much he’d teach me.
By Mimi Swartz
An idyllic small town confronts a controversial rape case involving four high school boys and a thirteen-year-old girl and discovers that nothing is certain—except that its children can’t escape the big-city culture of teenage sex.
By Mimi Swartz
The latest star pupil of the so-called Houston school.
By Mimi Swartz
The inside story of how industrious NASA scientists discovered signs of life in a Martian rock and boosted the fortunes of the tabloids, Hollywood producers, and even the president.
By Mimi Swartz
Practicing what he preaches.
By Mimi Swartz
On the road with Victor Morales, the schoolteacher turned U.S. Senate candidate who is out to prove he’s not running on empty.
By Mimi Swartz
Texas’ top drug lawyer helps dope dealers and cocaine kingpins beat their raps—and he’s proud of it.
By Mimi Swartz
Steve Stockman was supposed to have been a lethal weapon in the Republicans’ fight to unmake the Great Society. Instead the freshman legislator has been a loose cannon—an outsider in his own party.
By Mimi Swartz
A daughter’s gruesome murder became a grieving father’s dark crusade to find her killer and thrust him into an ever-widening spotlight as an advocate for victims of violent crime.
By Mimi Swartz
Five chic interior design stores in Fredericksburg are comforting, inspiring, and for the acquisitive, absolutely irresistible.
By Mimi Swartz
No longer judged a lightweight.
By Mimi Swartz
Universally appealing.
By Mimi Swartz
Give her regards to Broadway.
By Mimi Swartz
From invention to litigation, the breast implant has done more for Houston’s economy—and its psyche—than anything since oil.
By Mimi Swartz
Gigantic homes. Gala parties. Nonstop schmoozing. The hip summer playground of Houston’s high society is … Galveston?
By Mimi Swartz
A year after Robert James Waller left Iowa for the quieter climes of Big Bend, the best-selling author is discovering that it’s one thing to live like a Texan and quite another to be one.
By Mimi Swartz
By Mimi Swartz
How an old-fashioned Texas physician fought the takeover of modern medicine by heartless insurance companies—and lost.
By Mimi Swartz
By Mimi Swartz