**Winner of the 2021 Texas Institute of Letters Carr P. Collins’ Award for Best Book of Nonfiction** One part Columbine, one part God Save Texas, Joe Holley's riveting, compassionate book examines the 2017 mass shooting at a church in a small Texas town, revealing the struggles and triumphs of these fellow Texans long after the satellite news trucks have gone. Sutherland Springs was the last place anyone would have expected to be victimized by our modern-day scourge of mass shootings. Founded in the 1850s along historic Cibolo Creek, the tiny community, named for the designated physician during the siege of the Alamo, was once a vibrant destination for wealthy tourists looking to soak up the "cures" of its namesake mineral springs. By November 5, 2017, however, the day a former Air Force enlistee opened fire in the town's First Baptist Church, Sutherland Springs was a shadow of its former self. Twenty-six people died that Sunday morning, in the worst mass shooting in a place of worship in American history. Holley, who roams the Lone Star State as the "Native Texan" columnist for the Houston Chronicle and earned a Pulitzer- Prize nomination for his editorials about guns, spent more than a year embedded in the community. Long after most journalists had left, he stayed with his fellow Texans, getting to know a close-knit group of people - victims, heroes, and survivors. Holley shows how they work to come to terms with their loss and to rebuild shattered lives, marked by their deep faith in God and in guns. He also uses Sutherland Springs' unique history and its decades-long decline as a prism for understanding how an act of unspeakable violence reflects the complicated realities of Texas and America in the twenty-first century.
230 [1995]), 2–3; Stephen L. Hardin, Texian Iliad: A Military History of the Texas Revolution, 1835–1836 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994), 25; Stephen L. Moore, Savage Frontier, 1835–1837: Rangers, Riflemen, and Indian Wars in ...
This book recounts the harrowing story of those who lived through that day, witnessed terrible evil, and rose up to face it. Hope can be found in their faith, heroism, and actions, and in the overwhelming presence of God.
This book offers the first comprehensive history of Texas’ healing springs. Janet Valenza tracks the rise, popularity, and decline of the "water cure" from the 1830s to the present day.
... Sutherland Springs, Texas,” NPR, November 5, 2017, https://www.npr.org/2017/11/05/562233957/scenes-from-the-ground-the-mass- church-shooting-in-sutherland-springs-texas; Saeed Ahmed, Doug Criss, and Joe Sterling, “This Man May Have ...
Porter , Jack . “ For Knowledge and Character : Goodnight Baptist College Training Launched in 1898. ” Amarillo ( Tex . ) Sunday News- Globe , 14 August 1966 , sec . D , p . 16 . Porter , Millie Jones . Memory Cups of Panhandle Pioneers ...
A powerful call to end American gun violence from celebrated poets and those most impacted Focused intensively on the crisis of gun violence in America, this volume brings together poems by dozens of our best-known poets, including Billy ...
She waited for the light to turn green and eased off the highway to call her boss and good friend Todd Frady. As she did, Debbie felt God nudge her. If she'd just been near the man who had gunned down nine people in a house of worship, ...
Ignorance is bliss. Money is worth the same amount from revolutionaries and democracies, tyrants and criminals. One of the brokers of the deal with France was interrogated by Congress and asked, “Was it not your business to inquire ...
Dave Grossman, who in his perennial bestseller On Killing revealed that most of us are not "natural born killers" - and who has spent decades training soldiers, police, and others who keep us secure to overcome the intrinsic human ...