It is for good reason that J. Frank Dobie is known as the Southwest's
master storyteller. With his eye for color and detail, his ear for the
rhythm of language and song, and his heart open to the simple truth of
folk wisdom and ways, he movingly and unpretentiously spins the tales of
our collective heritages. This he does in Tales of Old-Time Texas, a
heartwarming array of twenty-eight stories filled with vivid characters,
exciting historical episodes, and traditional themes. As Dobie himself
says: "Any tale belongs to whoever can best tell it." Here, then, is a
collection of the best Texas tales-by the Texan who can best tell them.
Dobie's recollections include such classics in Lone Star State lore as
the tale of Jim Bowie's knife, the legend of the Texas bluebonnet, the
story of the Wild Woman of the Navidad, and the account of the headless
horseman of the mustangs. Other stories in this outstanding collection
regale us with odd and interesting characters and events: the stranger
of Sabine Pass, the Apache secret of the Guadalupes, the planter who
gambled away his bride, and the Robinhooding of Sam Bass. These stories,
and many more, make Tales of Old-Time Texas a beloved classic certain
to endure for generations.