My daughter Dorothy Guerrero and I embarked on a Texas history road trip and hit every Dairy Queen from the Alamo to Starbase.
@stephenharrigan
Writer at Large for Texas Monthly. Author of thirteen books, including The Gates of the Alamo, Big Wonderful Thing: A History of Texas, and the forthcoming Sorrowful Mysteries: the Shepherd Children of Fatima and the Fate of the Twentieth Century.
My daughter Dorothy Guerrero and I embarked on a Texas history road trip and hit every Dairy Queen from the Alamo to Starbase.
It's May 13, the day in 1917 when three children in Fatima, Portugal claimed they saw the Virgin Mary. Their story is the subject of my new book Sorrowful Mysteries: The Shepherd Children of Fatima and the Fate of the Twentieth Century, from @aaknopf.bsky.social
The New York Times has weighed in on my new book with this very welcome review by Robert P. Baird.
Calling all lapsed Catholics! Join me on my book tour for Sorrowful Mysteries: The Shepherd Children of Fatima and the Fate of the Twentieth Century.
Congrats to @stephenharrigan.bsky.social, whose @texasmonthly.bsky.social piece won the Audience Award this week:
www.texasmonthly.com/true-crime/s...
n my half-century of magazine journalism, I seem to have entirely avoided writing about crime. At least until now.
www.texasmonthly.com/true-crime/s...
This essay/elegy/whatever by Caitlin Flanagan in @theatlantic.com is one of the best things Iβve read all year.
Whatβs the best age to read The Catcher in the Rye? Turns out, to my great surprise, that the book achieves maximum poignancy when you pick it up again in your seventies.
Brand new here. Are we supposed to have a banner? I asked AI to take a look at the subject matter of my books and create something representative. I'm a bit alarmed by the result.
Thanks Pam!