April 2020: Roar of the Crowd
Reader letters published in our April issue.
Reader letters published in our April issue.
But we're hard at work creating another way for you to experience this incredible storytelling event.
Reader letters published in our March issue.
On two generations of talented storytellers contributing to our pages.
This ties the most nominations Texas Monthly has ever received in a single year. The magazine’s four nominations were also the most bestowed upon any publication west of the Potomac.
On March 17, we're taking over the Moody Theater for a night of storytelling from some of your favorite Texas artists.
Reader letters published in our February issue.
With our hit Boomtown podcast, Texas Monthly is learning new ways to tell stories.
Settle in for a by-no-means comprehensive list of some of the most popular stories in our pages this year.
Plus, feeling grateful for our gimlet-eyed deputy editor, Jeff Salamon.
Reader letters published in our January issue.
A 10-part podcast series from Texas Monthly and Imperative Entertainment.
Our new 11-part series takes you inside the rugged Permian Basin of West Texas, where roughnecks and billionaire wildcatters are fueling a boom so big it’s reshaping our climate, our economy, and our geopolitics.
On bee stings and boots—both cowboy and combat.
Reader letters published in our December issue.
On Texas Monthly’s newest hires.
Reader letters published in our November issue.
Reader letters published in our October issue.
On the battle over Texas history, a serial killer in Laredo, and more in our October issue.
Dallas-based writer and tortilla connoisseur José R. Ralat is one of five recent additions to our staff.
On honky-tonks, a collaboration with the Texas Tribune, and more in our September issue.
Reader letters published in our September issue.
Reader letters published in our August issue.
A letter from our editor.
We're thrilled to announce our new culture editor and some other important additions to the editorial staff.
Houston investor Randa Duncan Williams pledges to protect the magazine’s legacy and boost investments in its long-term growth.
A letter from our editor.
Reader letters published in our June issue.
A letter from our editor.
Our writers will bring their stories to vivid life for audiences at venues throughout the state.
A letter from our editor.
Reader letters published in our May issue.
Reader letters published in our April issue.
A letter from our editor.
Beginning today, we’re asking those who read our work online to do what our print subscribers have done for 46 years: subscribe to Texas Monthly.
Our eighth editor in chief will take the helm on January 28.
A devout Evangelical Christian and a Catholic nun are two of the state’s most powerful people, but they exercise their power in vastly different ways.
Patricia Sharpe and Kathy Blackwell dish on how they imagined, vetted, sampled, and served up our November feature story on Texas-style holiday meals.
Emily McCullar on hunting's place in her life, plus a tour through her glossary of hunting terms.
Leif Reigstad talks about his latest feature for Texas Monthly, about the killing of Buck Birdsong's calves.
Join us in Dallas on September 7th and 8th.
Texas Monthly's executive editor talks about his August feature tracing Schlitterbahn’s decades-long rise to its current perilous position.
Wallace wrote about the life and times of Myrtis Dightman, a rodeo star who should've been champ.
The honors include Excellence in Writing, Special Issue, and, once again, a Designer of the Year award.
The first summer after Harvey is when Texas coastal communities most need visitors.
Listen to the first episode of our new series, which takes you into the minds of some of Texas Monthly's great writers and editors.
Welcome to the new texasmonthly.com. Our look isn't the only thing that's changed.
Get the day's top stories delivered straight to your inbox.
This November, we're thrilled to bring you a new way to experience Texas Monthly, at a two-day event called the Edge of Texas.
We’re devoting all proceeds from new subscriptions to support Texans affected by the disaster.