Char Miller's collection of essays provides an insightful survey of San
Antonio and South Texas. The essays are grouped into six thematic
sections: an overview; natural and environmental history; water issues;
urban development; politics; and the city's future. Miller describes the
First Friday Art Walks in Southtown, where the promenade reenacts the
pedestrian traffic envisioned by the San Antonio founders when they
planned the city around a central square and cathedral. He recreates the
history behind the Alamo Quarry, when the upscale shopping center was a
cement factory and self-contained community. Ranging further afield, he
recounts how the Aplomado Falcon made a come-back in the Rio Grande
Valley, and how the river in the same valley has fared in water wars
between the United States and Mexico. In the four essays devoted to
water in San Antonio, Miller subtly and successfully portrays how water
has shaped the region's demographic and political realities.