Burros and Paintbrushes

Burros and Paintbrushes
Author:
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 186
Release: 1985
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780890962299

In 1923 a little train ran from Guadalajara, Mexico, to Chapala, but only twice a week. One of those excursions carried two young Americans, trained at the Art Institute of Chicago, to the small village to paint. Red-tiled roofs on pale pastel houses bordering a great silvery lake greeted the two. In the next four years the lives of the artists--and the bride one lured south from California--pulsated to the beat of a Mexico few Americans knew. This sprightly memoir by one of those young painters captures the tone and spirit of their adventures. Everett Gee Jackson's keen eye and quiet humor provide an intriguing view of the people and places he knew at that time--a time long gone--and of the making of an artist. From the widow's parrot that Senor Martinez taught to curse, to the murals of Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco; from burro rides over winding mountain trails, to paintings of straw-thatched huts rising on stilts out of a lake; from breakfasts in small native restaurants, to learning to see colors without names and buildings that defy the need to be balanced and static, Jackson adroitly weaves together the details of physical, cultural and artist's-eye landscapes. The graceful sketches and lush paintings reproduced in the book embody both the scenes of Mexico he describes and the sensibilities of the artist.

A Bookmark

A Bookmark
Author: Henry C. Dethloff
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1999
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780890968789

Given in memory of Bob Akers by Phyllis Dozier.

The Deer Pasture

The Deer Pasture
Author: Rick Bass
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 140
Release: 1996
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780393314359

Rick Bass's first collection of essays captures the clear, passionate voice of this acclaimed author at the very beginning of his career.

The 50 + Best Books on Texas

The 50 + Best Books on Texas
Author: A. C. Greene
Publisher: University of North Texas Press
Total Pages: 162
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781574410433

An annotated listing of over fifty books judged by the author to be the best examples of Texas literature; arranged alphabetically by title.

Wild to the Heart

Wild to the Heart
Author: Rick Bass
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 182
Release: 1997
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780393314878

On long weekends, Rick Bass drives away from Jackson, Mississippi, and the job that confines him. His excursions take him to southern rivers, southern swamps, and sometimes to conservation meetings. Through thirteen essays written in a style compared to Thoreau, Muir, and Annie Dillard, Bass records his meanderings in a lyrical exploration of wildness and freedomin nature and in ourselves. Illus.

Performing the Literary Interview

Performing the Literary Interview
Author: John Rodden
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2001-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780803239395

When authors are interviewed about their books or themselves, much more is going on than a simple conversation. The interview becomes a performance space for authorial orchestration and self-promotion, and interviewers in turn respond to such self-display and theatrics. ΓΈ Featuring absorbing conversations with nine well-known authors, including poets Richard Howard and Gerald Stern, novelist Isabel Allende, and scholar-intellectual Camille Paglia, Performing the Literary Interview is the first in-depth look at this type of performance art. Interviews with poets, fiction writers, and intellectuals enable John Rodden to identify a range of rhetorical strategies and their effects and to formulate a typology for appreciating the various roles that interviewers and interviewees assume. Traditionalists foreground their work rather than themselves, raconteurs are storytellers who skillfully spin anecdotes and creatively showcase their personalities, and advertisers more explicitly use the literary interview to promote and sell themselves. This pioneering, persuasive study stakes a claim to a new area of scholarly inquiry in the humanities. The literary interview can no longer be considered only as a voyeuristic window on an author, or a celebrity vehicle, or even an entertaining diversion, but should also be approached as a serious genre meriting scholarly attention and analysis.