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2002

11 x 11 in.
144 pp., 80 color photos

ISBN: 978-0-292-70198-4
$39.95, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $26.77

 
 

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Texas Rivers

Text by John Graves
Photographs by Wyman Meinzer

 

Back to Book Description

 

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • The Canadian
  • The Lower Neches
  • The Pecos
  • The Llano
  • The Brazos Clear Fork
  • The Upper Sabinal
  • Bibliography

Introduction: A Prefatory Note, with Acknowledgements

This book is not a comprehensive or even a representative study of Texas rivers. Both Wyman Meinzer and I have special interest in the western parts of the state, and five of the six chapters here are concerned with streams on the sunset side of the 98th meridian, which Walter Prescott Webb considered to be the dividing line between eastern and western ways of life. Our one river to the east of that line—nearly as far east as you can get without leaving Texas—is the Neches, which we chose because we both liked it and also, I suppose, in order to show that we knew there actually were rivers and people in other parts of the state....

The chapters, together with many of the photographs, were first published as a series of articles in Texas Parks & Wildlife magazine during a period of about three years. For use in the book, the sequence in which the articles appeared has been changed, and they have all been retitled and somewhat revised to make them fit together more meaningfully.

The main things that these rivers—some of them just sections of rivers—have in common is that they all flow within Texas, and that the country through which each one passes is typical of a distinctive part of the state. Those in the wide and varied region we call West Texas do share some historical memories from the eras of Indian warfare, northward trail drives, and so on, but the lands they drain, like the tone of their people's lives in the past and now, differ significantly, and in pictures and words we have tried to define some of those differences.

All the rivers too have suffered to some extent, often greatly, from modern mankind's manipulation and exploitation of their waters and their basins, and we have tried also to be honest about those matters.

Without the able help of a number of people, we would have had much skimpier knowledge to work with while producing the chapters and pictures in this book. It was heartening to find that every river and basin we chose to photograph and write about had its local enthusiasts, and that among these there was always at least one of scholarly bent who had delved deeply into the region's human and natural history and its lore. Some have written books that are listed in our bibliography. During much of my writing career I have been dependent on the insights of people like these, and I treasure them. They constitute one of the few remaining barriers against the deadly sameness that increasingly infests our world.

These friends willing to impart their knowledge and skills and perceptions to us are listed on the next three pages.

John Graves
2002

 

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