Texas ReadsGlenn Dromgoole
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New Texas Almanac features articles on food, wine

2016-17 Texas Almanac, published by the Texas State Historical Association, is jam-packed as usual with updated statistical and reference material — appropriate for the state’s official reference book.
But each edition of the Almanac always includes several features highlighting different aspects of Texas history and culture.
Food and wine are the lead articles in the new Almanac. Veteran food writer and cookbook author Dotty Griffith writes about the “five culinary sub-states” of Texas, pointing out how the five regions emphasize different types of cuisine, resulting from their history and cultural influences.
Griffith offers five recipes from The Texas Holiday Cookbook as examples: Chili con carne from South Texas; gumbo from the Texas Gulf Coast; brisket from Central Texas; Lone Star caviar (black-eyed peas) from East Texas; and pecan pie from West Texas.
Melinda Esco, author of Texas Wineries, provides a history of the expanding Texas wine industry, noting that Texas has more than 200 wineries and is the fifth-largest wine-producing state — after California, New York, Washington and Oregon.
Other features this year include an analysis of Texas professional and college sports by Dallas sports radio host Norm Hitzges and an article by Almanac editor Elizabeth Cruce Alvarez on the 70th anniversary of the King Ranch horse Assault winning the 1946 Triple Crown.
The Almanac also publishes “A Brief Sketch of Texas History” in each edition, but the sketch badly needs updating since it only covers up to 1980. A lot has happened in Texas in the past thirty-five years, including two Texans being elected President, and readers should expect a biennial reference book, produced by the state historical association, to be appropriately current with the state’s history.
The Almanac is $24.95 flexbound and $39.95 hardcover.

Running for his life: Serge Gasore, former Abilene Christian University track and cross country star runner, has written My Day to Die: Running for My Life about surviving the genocide campaign in Rwanda in 1994 when he was seven.
Assisted by Abilene resident Patsy Watson, Gasore tells his remarkable story about how he literally had to run for his life every day during the genocide, when hundreds of thousands were murdered. Then, as a teenager, he was kidnapped for three days and taken into the jungle where every day he thought it would be “my day to die.”
Miraculously, Gasore ended up at ACU on a track scholarship in 2005. Although he spoke no English when he arrived in the U.S., he graduated in four years and then earned two master’s degrees. He and his wife have established a foundation to help orphans in Rwanda and will return to Rwanda next month as missionaries. Read more about the foundation on his website, Rwandachildren.org.
“Never have I known anyone with more reason to hate and be bitter,” Watson writes, “and yet never have I known a more kind, gentle, loving and forgiving person.”
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Glenn Dromgoole is co-author, with Carlton Stowers, of 101 Essential Texas Books Contact him at g.dromgoole@suddenlink.net.
>> Check out his previous Texas Reads columns in Lone Star Lit
12.13.15 News Briefs
Dallas’s Deep Vellum brings home a triple crown of honors in December
It’s been a banner week for Deep Vellum Publishing.
The Dallas-based not-for-profit publisher of literature in translation, whose name is a nod to both the rich culture of one of Dallas’s most historic art districts and the legacy of fine books, has earned a top honor, making the 2015 Pen Shortlist for translation with Texas: The Great Theft by Carmen Boullosa, translated from the Spanish by Samantha Schnee.

On top of that, Deep Vellum founder Will Evans was recently nominated by Dallas Morning News Arts staff as Texan of the Year, alongside some of the region’s most notable artists and arts professionals (including recording artist Erykah Badu, gospel and soul singer and songwriter Leon Bridges, Chad Houser of Cafe Momentum, and Jeremy Strick of the Nasher Sculpture Center).

This past Thursday night Deep Vellum hosted a grand opening reception for its new bookstore and community center in Deep Ellum. >>READ MORE
Photographer Jeremy Enlow signs Cowboys of the Waggoner Ranch, presents talk Dec. 18 in Wichita Falls
FORT WORTH – As discussions continue for the sale of the legendary 510,572-acre Waggoner Ranch, the future is still undetermined for what may or may not change for twenty-six cowboys at the largest ranch in the U.S. under one contiguous fence.

Texas photographer Jeremy Enlow captures a behind-the-scenes glimpse of these legends through his inaugural photography book, Cowboys of the Waggoner Ranch (with text by Jan Nichols Batts), for sale at an upcoming book signing and presentation by Enlow.
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Doubleday
Hardcover, 978-0-385-53983-8 (also available as an ebook), 448 pgs., $27.95
October 6, 2015
In 1843, naturalist Zadock Thomas sets out from Chicago on an urgent mission to deliver a letter from his employer to a general in the Republic of Texas. At the same time, sort of, in the post-Collapse, post-United States of 2143, Zeke Thomas’s grandfather, a senator, has just died and Zeke is next in line for the office, which is now determined by bloodline. Seven senators compose the governing body of the remaining seven City-States, a totalitarian surveillance regime where writing implements and private documents are illegal. Zeke’s grandmother gives him an old letter of his grandfather’s that has never been opened because the family is frightened the letter may cast doubt on the Thomas bloodline. Then the letter goes missing.
Bats of the Republic: An Illuminated Novel by Zachary Thomas Dodson, who also designed the book, is an inspired blend of historical fiction, dystopian science fiction, traditional mystery, spiritualism, love story, adventure, Texas history, and Mexican folk tales. >>READ MORE
Simon & Schuster
Hardcover, 978-1-5011-0710-8
December 1, 2015
It’s 1916, Pancho Villa is raiding across the border, and Texas Ranger Hackberry Holland is searching for his long-lost son, Ishmael, a captain in the US Army, in Mexico, “a feral land, its energies as raw and ravenous as a giant predator that ingested the naïve and incautious.” Hackberry doesn’t find Ishmael this time, but he does run afoul of the Mexican Army and Arnold Beckman, an international arms dealer, escaping with a religious artifact that had been in Beckman’s possession, which may or may not be the Holy Grail.
House of the Rising Sun is an apocalyptic tale of addictions — alcohol, Morpheus, pain, love, power — which rob us of mercy, kindness, and human dignity. “I have nothing of value to impart,” Hackberry says. “My life has been dedicated to Pandemonium. That’s a place in hell John Milton wrote about. That also means I’m an authority on chaos and confusion and messing things up.” >>READ MORE
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