Murder, They Wrote
Two true-crime books unravel the twisted and deadly story of Dallasite Joy Aylor.
Two true-crime books unravel the twisted and deadly story of Dallasite Joy Aylor.
Tough guy Chuck Norris’ kick is better than his kiss on the TV hit Walker, Texas Ranger.
In Tyler, a high school student’s Confederate flag T-shirt is raising old fears.
Juvenile crime has cities across Texas resorting to teen curfews. Do they work?
In the forties I was just a kid with a Kodak, but my fascination with car wrecks taught me many lasting lessons.
Want to turn back the clock? A clinic in Mexico peddles a wonder hormone—just don’t expect to hear about its downside.
We are sixth-generation Texans and we are Jews. My family’s history is an account of the price we have paid to be both.
A look back at San Antonio Fiesta gowns reveals how the dresses have gone from elegant to excessive.
What’s eating Ann Richards? As her reelection campaign finally gets in high gear, the governor seems to be fighting a case of the mopes.
1/2 cup fresh soft goat cheese 24 edible flowers (preferably trumpet-shaped)Whip goat cheese in blender until smooth; pipe or spoon into flowers.To serve, arrange slices of stuffed lamb on plate atop tomatillo sauce. Decorate lamb with remaining pepper strips and garnish plate with flowers. Serves 6.
1 pound fresh tomatillos, quartered 1 jalapeño, seeded and chopped 2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh garlic 3 tablespoons clarified butter 1 cup sherry 1/4 cup soy sauce 1/4 cup brown sugar 1/2 cup chopped destemmed fresh mint 1 teaspoon ground black pepperSauté tomatillos, jalapeño, and garlic in clarified butter until
The ingredients are earthy but the effect is divine in chef Mark Morrow’s rustic anitra arrosto, or roast duck. Morrow’s recipes from Mi Piaci in Dallas (14854 Montfort) do a turn on traditional Italian fare: fresh fowl brushed with honey and balsamic vinegar and slow-cooked creamy polenta, made from simple cornmeal.The
He’s a budget cutter in an era of consumption, a conservative Democrat in a party gone soft, a good ol’ boy with no polish or flash. So why is everyone buzzing about Texas comptroller John Sharp?
Once, the fight for funding and attention in college sports pitted women against men. Today, with women’s sports commanding greater respectability, it’s also women versus women, and the fight is uglier.
After years of decay and death, a Houston neighborhood ravaged by the disease is learning to live with it—and surviving.
Ace Reid was the greatest cowboy cartoonist in the world; I laughed at his jokes and was honored to be his friend.
He may live in a posh Houston ‘burb, but rap star Scarface wants to fix up his old ‘hood.
Can you name any of the fourteen Branch Davidian defence lawyers? They hope so.
Camille Barnett focused on her image, not on Austin’s woes. Now she’s out of a job.
Can tejano heartthrob Emilio Navaira survive the crossover to country music?
When Texas’ last company town disappears this month, so will a cozy way of life my family knew well.
Eight indigenous authors, nine native critters: A bookish look at the wildest, woolliest creatures in Texas history.
A cool mariachi bar (in Juárez), tasty lake bass (in Cuidad Acuña), terrific shoes and boots (in Reynosa), and other secrets of border travel.
With native roots but global goals, investment guru Tom Hicks redefines Texas business for the nineties.
Why Austin’s suburban neighbors to the north wouldn’t take a bite out of Apple Computer.
On the three days before Lent, amid clouds of smoke and the sounds of musket fire, this tiny town is the site of Mexico’s most chaotic carnaval.
When Houston’s pro sports teams collapse late in the season—as they may do this year—faithful fans like me are never surprised. We’ve almost come to expect it.
Want to see millions of migrating monarchs on their annual winter getaway? Wing on down to Mexico.
The quietest member of the governor’s fitness panel throws his weight around—at last.
Four quickie Branch Davidian books reveal that the full story has yet to come out.
A group of renowned rabbis teaches many Dallas Jews the deeper meanings of Judaism.
Border chief Silvestre Reyes confronts illegal imigration—and his heritage.
When Stevie Ray Vaughan died, Texas lost its premier guitarist. Can any of these ambitious young players fill his boots?
Without regrets, Harris County district attorney Johnny Holmes puts more criminals on death row than any U.S. lawman.
Now is the time to check out newly stylish hotels and restaurants in West Texas. Tourists aren’t far behind.
She was the princess who wore Tiffany perfume. He was the middle-class guy who raced cars. But when they met on the cystic fibrosis wing of a Dallas hospital, romance bloomed.
Are the legendary lawmen necessary? Yes, but their inability to grapple with the modern world threatens to make them irrelevant.
Once a wild child, now a suburban mom, Marion Winik could be Texas’ next big literary success.
Forget what you’ve heard about Mexico City’s “urban hell.” From its well-organized workers to its highly evolved social system, it could be NAFTA’s greatest economic success story.
Until I house-sat there last year, I thought I knew rarefied Highland Park. To my surprise, it was much more fragile and defensive than it had seemed.
Once, country acts made art in Austin and money in Nashville. Today each place is a lot like the other, which is why more Texas singers are heading east.