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Reviews

The Aesthete from Archer

A new biography of Larry McMurtry tells the tale of a writer ever met with misreading.

by Roberto Ontiveros

Keep Reading

‘Proudly Claiming Our Tears’: Fathers Stand Together for Their Trans and Nonbinary Kids

by Kit O'Connell

Mythbusting Texas’ Reactionary Past

by Alex Birnel

A Wall That’s Worth Defending

by David R. Brockman

Mar 14, 2024

‘The Queen vs. Texas’ Revisits the Battle over Lone Star Drag  

Raemonn James, better known as Hermajestie the Hung, teamed up with a filmmaker to tell a moving story of activism and queer culture.

by Kit O'Connell

A shadowy photo of Ku Klux Klan members, silhouetted in their white robes by a burning bonfire. Dec 12, 2023

Unmasking the Klansman

A new book reveals the untold story of a Ku Klux Klan member’s literary double life.

by Paul Stekler

An American flag mural painted on the side of a metal building in rural Arkansas. Aug 08, 2023

How Less-educated Whites Fell Behind and Blamed Race

In Clinton, Arkansas, a reporter examines the effects of a stagnant economy on the place she came from.

by Monica Potts

A woman in a white dress and headdress touches hands with a monkey-like human in a dark outfit with gold collar and cuffs. They are standing in a woodland with rich red lighting on its foliage. May 22, 2023

‘American Born Chinese’ and the Limits of Cultural Representation 

The young hero in the new Disney+ show follows a familiar journey for colonized people, as predicted by theorist Frantz Fanon.

by Josephine Lee

Robert Saucedo poses at a book signing at the Alamo Drafthouse. Apr 13, 2023

The Who Behind ‘Where Wolf’

A crowdfunded story of furries, journalism and murder: Film programmer-turned-comic book artist Robert Saucedo tells us about his creation.

by Nguyên Lê

The March/April issue of the Texas Observer, featuring some of our best work in 2023. The cover depicts a cartoon of young boy dressed as a militia member. Apr 02, 2023

The Texas Observer Lives!

After a terrifying near-death experience, we live to muckrake another day.

by Gabriel Arana

Gena as she appears in Queendom: a queer artist in a complex costume, with a white wig that looks like it's made of drippy wax and a complex costume made of similar material with an organic feel, like roots surrounging her body. She has half sleeves and part of a costume covering her stomach. She is riding an escalator somewhere in Russia. Mar 30, 2023

Confronting Queer Oppression in Moscow … And America

Queendom, a documentary that recently premiered at the SXSW film festival, should leave viewers—especially LGBTQ+ viewers—shaken.

by Lance Morrison

A white woman, Emily Nestor, the star of Citizen Sleuth, is seen reclining as she receives a tattoo on the back of her calf. Mar 29, 2023

True Crime’s Ethical Dilemma

What begins as a search for a murder ends as a hard look at the murky ethics of "nonfiction" crime storytelling.

by Sara Hutchinson

The Angel Gabrielle and Baal in Hail Mary. A woman touches a man on the face tenderly, and her hand is glowing with a strange blue light. Mar 22, 2023

A Border Crossing with the Devil

Hail Mary, which premiered at this year’s SXSW Film Festival, reframes the immigration crisis through a supernatural, biblical lens.

by Josephine Lee

Posts pagination

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