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Texas Historical
Literature 
Source: The Handbook of
Texas Online
(page 2)
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1900 to the present. At the
turn of the twentieth century historical subjects were
much in demand in American fiction, and once again Texas
fiction mirrored the national trend. The republic era
proved to be by far the most popular historical subject
during the early years of the new century. Indeed the
Alamo proved so popular that Stephen Crane, after a visit
to San Antonio in 1895, wrote, "Statistics show that
69,710 writers have begun at the Alamo." A partial
listing of works includes the following, each of which
features the Alamo: William O. Stoddard, The Lost Gold of
the Montezumas: A Story of the Alamo (1900); Opie Read,
In the Alamo (1900); Clinton Giddings Brown, Ramrod
Jones, Hunter and Patriot (1905); Frank Templeton,
Margaret Ballentine; or, The Fall of the Alamo: A Romance
of the Texas Revolution (1907); Eugene P. Lyle, Jr., The
Lone Star (1907); Edward Plummer Alsbury, Guy Raymond: A
Story of the Texas Revolution (1908); Everett McNeil, In
Texas with Davy Crockett: A Story of the Texas War of
Independence (1908); and Joseph A. Altsheler, The Texan
Star: The Story of a Great Fight for Liberty (1912).
But the most notable work dealt
with the more recent past, the era of the cattle drive,
captured vividly in Andy Adams's The Log of a Cowboy
(1903). Written expressly to counter the romanticism of
Owen Wister's immensely popular The Virginian, published
the previous year, Adams's book, constructed as a novel
but without a romantic plot, depicted the cowboy as a
worker instead of a dandy. It was instantly regarded as a
classic of cattle culture. In a more popular vein, some
of the local-color stories of William Sydney Porter [O.
Henry] were set in Texas. His 1907 collection, Heart of
the West, is typical.
Literary interest in the past took other forms than the
somewhat bloated, over-written historical novels listed
above but long forgotten. One of the strongest
expressions of this interest occurred in the emerging
field of folklore. The Texas Folklore Society, launched
in 1909, proved instrumental in locating, collecting, and
publishing material of intrinsic interest as well as
providing source material for future writers. Francis
Edward Abernethy's The Texas Folklore Society, 1909-1943
and The Texas Folklore Society, 1943-1971 provide a
valuable historical record of the accomplishments of the
society. J. Frank Dobie, the foremost figure in the
society, mined the past for stories of gold-seekers,
legendary hunters, cattlemen, cowboys, and every species
of wild critter from mustangs to rattlesnakes.
His first book, A Vaquero of
the Brush Country, appeared in 1929, and his second,
Coronado's Children, an account of lost mines and legends
of fortune-seekers, followed in 1930 and became a
Literary Guild selection. Other members of the society
made substantial contributions also. John A. Lomax
collected songs and ballads from the cattle range; his
Cowboy Songs, and Other Frontier Ballads (1910) is a
major early collection. Emily Dorothy Scarborough, a
folklorist with a Ph.D. from Columbia University whose
curriculum vitae is inscribed on her tombstone in Waco,
published a valuable collection of folklore, On the Trail
of Negro Folk Songs, in 1925.
That same year she incorporated
folkloric elements into her best known novel, The Wind,
published anonymously, and famous for its depiction of
harsh frontier conditions in late-nineteenth-century West
Texas. The Trail Drivers of Texas (1923-24), collected
and edited by George W. Saunders and J. Marvin Hunter,q
brought together numerous oral accounts of old-time
cattlemen and cowboys that has proved a treasure trove
for future novelists such as Larry McMurtry. Among later
folklorists, Mody C. Boatright, secretary and editor of
the Texas Folklore Society from 1943 to 1964, published
several works featuring another major Texas industry,
oil, in such books as Gib Morgan, Minstrel of the Oil
Fields (1945), Folklore of the Oil Industry (1963), and
(with William A. Owens), Tales from the Derrick Floor, A
People's History of the Oil Industry (1970). Ben K. Green
earned a reputation as an folk expert on horses and cows.
His Horse Tradin' appeared in 1967, Wild Cow Tales in
1969, and The Last Trail Drive Through Dallas in 1971
(see CATTLE TRAILING).
In 1943 J. Frank Dobie's influential bibliography, A
Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest, mentioned
only a handful of fiction titles dealing with Texas.
Dobie ignored a good deal of extant fiction, and since
then the number of novels written about Texas has
increased exponentially to the point where a substantial
book-length bibliography would be required to list them
all. The following is an attempt to chart the broad
outlines of Texas fiction in the twentieth century.
From the 1920s through the late 1960s, much of the best
of Texas writing came from the Southern side of the
ledger. This is contrary to received myth, but the facts
speak for themselves. There were at least as many writers
following in the Southern tradition as in the Western, a
point most saliently developed by scholar James W. Lee.
The Southern-based novels explored the fabric of life on
the farms and plantations of East Texas, sometimes
looking nostalgically backwards at the past, but more
often looking critically at the present. Sue (Susanna S.
H.) Pinckney's In the Southland (1906) was an early
attempt to treat East Texas culture as an extension of
the Old South. Consisting of two novelettes titled
"Disinherited" and "White Violets,"
In the Southland offers a highly romantic portrait of
cavaliers, ladies, and plantation customs familiar to any
reader of Southern historical fiction.
Laura L. S. Krey's And Tell of
Time (1938), a later effort in the same manner, is a
novel marinated in the Confederate worldview and one
that, like Gone With the Wind, found much of value in the
antebellum social order. Among the novelists who explored
cotton-plantation culture in East Texas were a number
who, instead of idealizing the past, criticized the
present, especially the system of farm tenancy. Dorothy
Scarborough alone wrote three novels on the subject. The
best of them, In the Land of Cotton, appeared in 1923;
the other two are Can't Get a Redbird (1929) and The
Stretchberry-Smile (1932). Ruth Cross explored similar
themes and materials. The Golden Cocoon (1924) paints a
grim picture of life in the cottonfields and an even
grimmer one of the faculty at the University of Texas,
"a backwash of incompetents whom life had
rejected." In The Big Road (1931) Cross produced a
melodramatic study of the clash between provincial
ignorance (picking cotton) and cosmopolitan values
(pursuing a classical music career in Europe).
Several agrarian novels of the
Thirties and Forties deserve mention. Edward Everett
Davis's The White Scourge (1940) called cottonfields
"the great open air slum of the South," an
indictment that characterizes much of the fiction written
about tenant farming. In Land Without Moses (1937)
Charles Curtis Munz realistically portrayed the life of
an East Texas sharecropping family. John W. Wilson's High
John the Conqueror (1949) is especially notable for its
narrative skill in convincingly portraying the lives of
black sharecroppers living on an East Texas farm. Though
set in Oklahoma, The Stricklands (1939), by Edwin M.
Lanham, Jr., of Weatherford, is also a fine contribution
to the literature of the tenant farmer. Two other
sharecropper novels of the period are Sigman Byrd's The
Redlander (1939) and John Watson's The Red Dress (1949).
The most significant of the tenant-farming novels,
however, is easily George Sessions Perry's Hold Autumn in
Your Hand (1941), which won both the Texas Institute of
Letters award and the National Book Award, the first
Texas novel to be so honored. Set on a small blackland
farm near Rockdale in the late Thirties, Hold Autumn in
Your Hand is a kind of Texas Georgics, developing themes
put forward by the Roman poet Vergil: "The farmer
cleaves the earth with his curved plough,/ This is his
yearlong work, thus he sustains / His homeland, thus his
little grandchildren" (Georgics, Book II). John W.
Thomason's Lone Star Preacher (1941) belongs in the
Southern tradition as well. It traces the life and times
of a fiery Methodist preacher in East Texas during the
Civil War era.
On the basis of international
reputation, the status conferred by inclusion in major
anthologies of American literature, and the respect
indicated by academic criticism, Katherine Anne Porter
must be judged the most acclaimed Texas literary artist.
She, too, belongs indisputably to the Southern tradition.
"The Old Order" sequence of stories, contained
in The Leaning Tower and Other Stories (1944), includes
her most widely anthologized masterpiece, "The
Grave." These stories, along with the three short
novels of Pale Horse, Pale Rider (1939), the single
greatest artistic work authored by a Texas writer, define
a world of fading nineteenth-century moral assurance
symbolized by an older generation played off against a
younger one, dramatized chiefly in the developing
consciousness of Porter's alter ego, Miranda.
In the post-World War II years
the Southern tradition in Texas writing informed the
careers of three major Texas authors: Charles William
Goyen, William Humphrey, and William A. Owens. Goyen's
The House of Breath (1950) is one of the more daring
works of experimental modernist narration by a Texas
writer. Told in highly convoluted oral and rhetorical
style, it conveys a powerful sense of a provincial East
Texas community giving way before the tide of modernity.
Today Goyen's work is more highly valued in France than
it is in the United States. William Humphrey has produced
a number of novels and short stories grounded in the
culture and mores of the corner of Northeast Texas where
he grew up, in Clarksville, near the Arkansas-Oklahoma
border. Home from the Hill (1958) is a tale of a
legendary hunter and a Gothic marriage, laced with the
sometimes too obvious influence of William Faulkner.
The Ordways (1964) is a comic
picaresque tale that rambles across Texas. Perhaps best
of all is Humphrey's 1975 memoir, Farther Off From
Heaven, a book that charts the changes in East Texas from
the 1930s to the 1960s. Also of interest is No Resting
Place (1989), a historical novel that explores the
lamentable removal of the Indians from East Texas during
Mirabeau B. Lamar's presidency of the republic. William
A. Owens, folklorist, novelist, and memoirist, produced
his best work in an autobiographical trilogy that
comprises This Stubborn Soil (1966), A Season of
Weathering (1973), and Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song
(1983). This Stubborn Soil gives an especially vivid
account of the arduous struggle of a youth attempting to
obtain an education in dirt-poor rural Texas in the first
decades of the twentieth century.
Other recent East Texas writers
of note include Bill Brett, whose first-person vernacular
narration is reminiscent of Mark Twain. His collection of
back-country tales, Well, He Wanted To Know and I Knew So
I Told Him (1972), reissued as East Texas Tales (1972),
and his novel, The Stolen Steers: A Tale of the Big
Thicket (1977 ), bring the old tradition of Southwestern
humor into modern times in rural East Texas. Leon Hale's
Bonney's Place (1972) captures well the flavor of life
surrounding a honkeytonk in East Texas. In his Half a
Look of Cain: A Fantastical Narrative (1994) Reginald
Gibbons consciously drew upon the example of William
Goyen for its East Texas setting and themes. Mary Karr's
memoir of a dysfunctional East Texas family, The Liar's
Club (1995), received glowing reviews in the national
press.
Although the history and
culture of African Americans have been treated by most of
the white writers in the Southern tradition, often very
stereotypically, there is one major exception. John
Howard Griffin, a Catholic who studied art in France,
underwent skin treatments to darken his skin in order to
travel in the South as a Negro and recorded his
experiences in an influential book during the
civil-rights movement, Black Like Me (1961). There have
as yet been few works by black Texas writers, though
there is also some indication recently that things are
beginning to change in this regard. The earliest black
writer of fiction in Texas was Sutton E. Griggs, whose
Imperium in Imperio: A Study of the Negro Race Problem, a
Novel (1899) was one of several novels that he wrote
about race in America.
Two important black writers are folklorist J. Mason
Brewer and C. C. White, a black preacher. In his
collections of folk tales, The Word on the Brazos (1953)
and Dog Ghosts and Other Texas Negro Folk Tales (1958),
Brewer depicted the humorous side of black life, though
at the same time revealing the harshness and
unpleasantness of life in a segregated society. C. C.
White's No Quittin' Sense (1969), told to Adam M.
Holland, is the best account in Texas literature of
growing up black in East Texas. Albert Race Sample's
Racehorse: Big Emma's Boy (1984) is a work of raw power
that details the life of a black convict in Texas
prisons. A promising recent black author who deals with
Texas in varying degrees in his short fiction is Reginald
McKnight, whose The Kind of Light That Shines on Texas
appeared in 1992. More recently, Anita Richmond Bunkley
in Black Gold (1994) combined historical research with a
flair for steamy melodrama in a novel about blacks living
in a Texas oil boomtown in the 1920s.
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