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Glenn Dromgoole is co-author of 101 Essential Texas Books. Contact him at g.dromgoole@suddenlink.net.

Glenn Dromgoole's
Texas Reads column appears weekly at LoneStarLiterary.com

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Glenn Dromgoole

 

6.28.15   Twelve Texas novels for your summer reading list

 

Okay, it’s warm and sunny, the days start early and end late, TV is in reruns, you can cook hamburgers outside only so many times, and it’s still a couple of months until the first football kickoff. How about some summer reading? Settle in with a good Texas novel. Head for the beach or the mountains or stay home in the air-conditioning.

 

“But I’m not into fiction!” you say.

 

Well, check out these Texas storytellers. Here are a dozen tales I’ve read this year that might open your mind, engage your imagination, broaden your literary horizons, and most of all provide you with several hours of good reading.

 

Death, Taxes, and Cheap Sunglasses is Diane Kelly’s eighth novel featuring Dallas IRS agent Holloway, who always manages to find herself in hot water as she ferrets out tax cheats.

 

The Outcasts by Kathleen Kent, a western set in Texas after the Civil War, involves a young Texas state policeman, a ruthless killer, a wily prostitute, and rumors of buried treasure.

 

The Big Drift by Patrick Dearen is a Spur Award–winning fictional account of the disastrous blizzard in 1884 and the ensuing cattle roundup the next spring.

 

Ransom Island by Miles Arceneaux is a wacky murder mystery set on the Texas Gulf Coast in 1953, with Galveston gangsters, beer joint characters, and a crazy beach hermit spicing up the action.

 

Migratory Animals, an acclaimed first novel by Mary Helen Specht, concerns young professionals having to deal with real life financial, medical, family, romantic, and career challenges.

 

The Same Sky by Amanda Eyre Ward is told from two viewpoints: that of a Honduras girl who longs to join her mother in the U.S., and that of a childless couple who own the most popular barbecue restaurant in Austin.

 

The Boys of the Dixie Pig, a medical thriller by Stacy Childs, revolves around five men who were best friends as boys in Abilene getting together for a reunion forty years later that will drastically change their lives.

 

Every Common Sight by Tim Madigan features an aging World War II veteran and a young mother, both of whom bear dark secrets they have been unable to share.

 

The Trailer Park Princess and the Middle Finger of Fate, a comic mystery by Kim Hunt Harris, blends humor, murder, friendship, and faith into the mix.

 

One True Heart by Jodi Thomas is the ninth (and last for a while) in her series set in fictional Harmony, Texas. Thomas thinks it is “the funniest book I’ve ever written.”

 

A Ride Home by Pamela Howell finds two college students literally fighting for their lives in far West Texas, in the middle of nowhere.

 

Dear Hank Williams by Kimberly Willis Holt is set in 1948. An eleven-year-old girl picks the up-and-coming country singer (Hank Sr.) to be her pen pal.

 

* * * * *

 

Glenn Dromgoole is co-author of 101 Essential Texas Books.

Contact him at g.dromgoole@suddenlink.net.

 

>> Read his past Texas Reads columns in Lone Star Literary Life here.

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