Big Wonderful Thing
944 pages, 6 1/4 x 9 1/4
188 b&w photos, 10 b&w maps
Hardcover
Release Date:01 Oct 2019
ISBN:9780292759510
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Big Wonderful Thing

A History of Texas

University of Texas Press

2020 Philosophical Society of Texas Nonfiction Book Prize
2019 Nonfiction Book Award Finalist, Writers’ League of Texas
2021 Citation from the San Antonio Conservation Society

"Harrigan, surveying thousands of years of history that lead to the banh mi restaurants of Houston and the juke joints of Austin, remembering the forgotten as well as the famous, delivers an exhilarating blend of the base and the ignoble, a very human story indeed. [ Big Wonderful Thing is] as good a state history as has ever been written and a must-read for Texas aficionados.”—Kirkus, Starred Review

The story of Texas is the story of struggle and triumph in a land of extremes. It is a story of drought and flood, invasion and war, boom and bust, and the myriad peoples who, over centuries of conflict, gave rise to a place that has helped shape the identity of the United States and the destiny of the world.

“I couldn’t believe Texas was real,” the painter Georgia O’Keeffe remembered of her first encounter with the Lone Star State. It was, for her, “the same big wonderful thing that oceans and the highest mountains are.”

Big Wonderful Thing invites us to walk in the footsteps of ancient as well as modern people along the path of Texas’s evolution. Blending action and atmosphere with impeccable research, New York Times best-selling author Stephen Harrigan brings to life with novelistic immediacy the generations of driven men and women who shaped Texas, including Spanish explorers, American filibusters, Comanche warriors, wildcatters, Tejano activists, and spellbinding artists—all of them taking their part in the creation of a place that became not just a nation, not just a state, but an indelible idea.

Written in fast-paced prose, rich with personal observation and a passionate sense of place, Big Wonderful Thing calls to mind the literary spirit of Robert Hughes writing about Australia or Shelby Foote about the Civil War. Like those volumes, it is a big book about a big subject, a book that dares to tell the whole glorious, gruesome, epically sprawling story of Texas.

Harrigan, surveying thousands of years of history that lead to the banh mi restaurants of Houston and the juke joints of Austin, remembering the forgotten as well as the famous, delivers an exhilarating blend of the base and the ignoble, a very human story indeed. [Big Wonderful Thing is] as good a state history as has ever been written and a must-read for Texas aficionados. Kirkus, Starred Review
Harrigan, essentially, is to Texas literature what Willie Nelson is to Texas music…Texas is an incredibly fascinating state—and Harrigan, who recognizes that the state's diversity is what makes it great, truly does it justice. Endlessly readable and written with great care, Big Wonderful Thing is just that. NPR
The great strength of Harrigan’s work is that he tells the stories of all the types of people who have lived in Texas, from its earliest days into modern times, with a sense that all of their lives mattered in fashioning the state’s identity. New York Review of Books
[Harrigan] has now given us a—no other word for it—Texas-sized book about the place he’s called home for decades. Lavishly illustrated, fully annotated, brimming with sass, intelligence, trenchant analysis, literary acumen and juicy details, it is a page-turner that can be read straight through or at random. It is big. It is popular history at its best. Wall Street Journal
Harrigan uses his stupendous storytelling skills to great effect [in Big Wonderful Thing]. He covers the state's major historical events from inventive angles, introduces newly discovered archaeological and archival research, and excels at puffing up many of Texas's larger-than-life personalities. Foreword Reviews, Starred Review
Harrigan describes post-Columbian Texas in novelistic style in this eloquent homage to the Lone Star state...History lovers will enjoy this packed, fascinating account of a singular state. Publishers Weekly
The shelf that holds your Texana—T.R. Fehrenbach's 'Lone Star,' James Michener's fictionalized 'Texas'—may need to be reinforced. Harrigan…has a contender to sit beside those worthy tomes…Harrigan's Lone Star tales are embodied by people great and unknown, many of whom would not have registered in what he calls the 'revised standard version of Texas history.' San Antonio Express-News
Because it is so well told and because it embraces so much of the state’s charms and contradictions, Big Wonderful Thing is likely to define popular Texas history for the general reader for at least a generation to come. austin360
Harrigan is at his best when he concentrates on the state's abundance of big personalities, offering up a gallery of Texas scoundrels, psychopaths, and incompetents...[Harrigan] brings an appealing humility to the impossible task of cramming a raucous, vicious, glorious state into one big, wonderful book. Texas Observer
A big wonderful book…[Big Wonderful Thing] is fun to read. Harrigan knows how to tell a story that keeps the reader looking forward to the next one. Abilene Reporter-News
Big Wonderful Thing…takes readers around the vast landscape [of Texas] to see everything from the first native tribes and colonists to artists and politicians. Harrigan's book connects the people and places who've made Texas what it was and is. Alcalde
Harrigan’s gift for storytelling makes this monumental work a pleasure to read. Throughout this extremely well-researched and fascinating book, Harrigan strives to dispel the myths of Texas history and remain true to its reality, creating a real page-turner for aficionados of Texas history and novices alike. The Literary South
[Big Wonderful Thing] provides an excellent perspective on [Texas's] rich history with a wider, more diverse lens…Harrigan brings his exceptional talents for storytelling and reporting to this volume that promises to educate—and entertain—many about the complexitites of this rich and storied state. Texas Highways
The sheer number of individual Texans, here, is as incredible as the Texas landscape...Along with the usual suspects of Texas lore, Big Wonderful Thing throws light on many overlooked figures...Harrigan serves as a masterful guide on this journey, navigating Big Wonderful Thing safely between the abyss of historical revisionism and the fairyland of hagiography. Harrigan's Texas is mythically large and as majestically unusual as the longhorn that Texans love so much, but Big Wonderful Thing keeps its feet firmly planted on the ground. The American Conservative
Harrigan is a master storyteller and weaves a highly enjoyable tale of Texas that is sometimes tall but always big. A must-read for all Texans and those who are  curious about more than the legend of the state. Library Journal, Starred Review
[An] epic new history of Texas…The book is nosed out in sheer heft only by Texas itself, it seems. But it doesn't read that way. Harrigan…outlines Texas' particulars from prehistory to just after 9/11 in granular detail, with an intimate, conversational style. Houston Chronicle
A comprehensive look at the history of our state...Harrigan doesn't burnish the heights or ignore the depths of Texas history; his book reflects both the bright and the dark, like a piece of photographic film, recording light and shadow as it makes an image. Kerrville Daily Times
Before embarking on Stephen Harrigan's Big Wonderful Thing I kept asking myself, do I really need to read a 900-page history of Texas? Well, I suppose I didn't need to but within 20 pages I wanted to, every spare moment I got. Geoff Dyer, Literary Hub
What really sets Big Wonderful Thing apart is that it reads more like Lonesome Dove than it does something you might have been assigned in your seventh grade Texas history class. Harrigan is a master of identifying anecdotes that have been tucked away in forgotten corners, dusting them off, and spinning them into great yarns...Though the book leads the reader on a singular, epic trip through the state’s past, each chapter also manages to feel self-contained, like a magazine feature. Texas Monthly, "19 Moments That Shaped Texas in 2019"
At once objective and intensely personal, this expansive history exposes the reality beneath the myth of Texas exceptionalism and, in the process, gives overdue credit to people who fought in the shadows to forge a multi-cultural society where, today, Vietnamese refugees stand arm in arm with Alamo descendants. Harrigan has done a remarkable thing: in 900-plus pages, he vividly reimagines the endlessly fascinating saga of a state and its citizens. Pima County Public Library, "Southwest Books of the Year"
The long-awaited history of Texas by a master storyteller is here. We haven’t had such a definitive history in years. For all readers, what Harrigan does so well is bring these stories to life — no dry tome here. Houston Chronicle, "Our 15 Favorite Books of 2019"
Harrigan takes the yellowed vanish off in his magnificent new history of Texas…[Big Wonderful Thing is] a great corrective for those of us who grew up hearing mostly about the evils of carpet baggers and scalawags. Rivard Report
Harrigan has crafted a volume of almost 900 pages that reads like a series of presentations by master storytellers. He connects the prominent dots of much-discussed figures and events with threads about everyday Texans whose stories, many told here for the first time, illustrate important parts of the state's history. Even when Harrigan is trading in the familiar, he marshals fresh detail about women, enslaved Africans, Native Americans, poor whites, and other stripes of Texan often overlooked in accounts of the state's formation...The title, from a statement by the artist Georgia O'Keefe, perfectly suits this well-researched and highly readable book. HistoryNet
Throughout Big Wonderful Thing, Harrigan's sense of wonder is infectious, leading the reader to see the state with fresh eyes, to see its landscape and the people on it as deserving of their reputation as outsized in every respect, larger than life. Austin Chronicle
[Harrigan's] story of Texas succeeds because of its diversity and his embrace of the success and failures of the multifaceted peoples who have fought over what Texas means for centuries. His keen sense for the kind of interesting personalities to tell this story finds a fertile home in Dallas. D Magazine
Big Wonderful Thing is a popular history of Texas that does exactly what the author intended: provide highly readable and entertaining coverage of the sweep of Texas history. Southwestern Historical Quarterly
[Big Wonderful Thing] reads like a novel about our great state’s history with all the beauty, suspense, kindness, strength, tragedy, loss, and even horror you’d never expect from a history book. San Antonio Report
Harrigan updates Fehrenbach and his history of the Lone Star state lives up to its forebear's high standard. Of particular interest is the attention Harrigan pays to marginalized groups; his writing on native peoples and African Americans in Texas is compelling. Publishers Weekly, "The 10 Best Books About Texas"
[Harrigan] provides a comprehensive history lesson by telling a story of interwoven people, places, and events in such a way that you forget how much you are learning. El Paso Inc
Considered by many to be the consummate book on Texas history—a riveting tale of events. Hood County News
Best history of Texas I’ve ever read. Texas Co-op Power
Stephen Harrigan has given us a wonderful new history of Texas. It tells us all we need to know and little that we don't need to know. A splendid effort. Larry McMurtry
Big Wonderful Thing is history at its best—comprehensive, deeply informed, pleasurable, and filled with surprise and delight. It is at once a gift to the people of Texas and an unflinching explanation to the world at large of America’s most controversial state. The book itself is truly a big wonderful thing. Lawrence Wright
No one tells the story of Texas better than Stephen Harrigan. He brings to Big Wonderful Thing contemporary and thoughtful analysis along with the most graceful writing anywhere. Harrigan pulls no punches but uses humor and pathos to examine the complexities and contradictions that have made us who we are. Finally, Texas has the rich and honest history it deserves. Mimi Swartz
It's rare to find a book that so compellingly weds such deep research with brilliant storytelling. A masterwork and a Texas history for the ages, destined to become a classic. Dan Rather
I am not sure which is the greater achievement here: digesting such a vast amount of historical data or making that gigantic wall of information fun to read. Because it certainly is the latter. I challenge the reader, in fact, to open to any page of this 829-page colossus and not have fun. It’s all interesting, and that is not hype. Harrigan tacks brilliantly through the shifting winds of Texas history by telling a series of rip-snorting good tales. S.C. Gwynne, author of New York Times bestselling books Empire of the Summer Moon and Rebel Yell

Stephen Harrigan has devoted much of his life to exploring and explaining Texas, ever since his family crossed the Red River from Oklahoma in 1953. He is the author of numerous works of nonfiction and fiction, including the critically acclaimed novels A Friend of Mr. Lincoln, Remember Ben Clayton, and the New York Times best seller The Gates of the Alamo. He is a longtime writer for Texas Monthly and an award-winning screenwriter who has written many movies for television.

  • Prologue. Big Tex
  • Part One. They Came from the Sky
    • 1. Castaways
    • 2. Golden Cities
    • 3. “Woe to Us”
    • 4. The Lady in Blue
    • 5. Voyageurs
    • 6. God’s Work
  • Part Two. The Ripe Peach
    • 7. Filibusters
    • 8. “God Speed Ye”
    • 9. The Texas Dream
    • 10. The Consequence of Failure
    • 11. Come and Take It
    • 12. “The Alamo Is Ours!”
    • 13. Vengeance
  • Part Three. The People Want Excitement
    • 14. Aftermath
    • 15. Spartan Spirit
    • 16. “Savage Ware Fare”
    • 17. The Broken Flagpole
    • 18. Los Diablos Tejanos
    • 19. The Crisis of the Crisis
    • 20. Robbers and Lawyers
    • 21. Warriors and Refugees
    • 22. “I Will Never Do It”
    • 23. “With Throbbing Hearts”
    • 24. Reconstructed
    • 25. The End of Comanchería
    • 26. Fenced In
    • 27. The “Peril” of Legislation
    • 28. Bipedal Brutes
    • 29. Scorpions and Horny Toads
  • Part Four. While Old Rip Slept
    • 30. A Thousand Little Devils
    • 31. Gushers
    • 32. Light Coming on the Plains
    • 33. Sediciosos
    • 34. Pa
    • 35. War at Home and Abroad
    • 36. The Blacksnake Whip
  • Part Five. The Empire of Texas
    • 37. Music and Mayhem
    • 38. The Boy from the Hill Country
    • 39. Centennial
    • 40. Passionate Ones
    • 41. Texans at War Again
    • 42. The Show of Shows
    • 43. A New Texas
    • 44. Ye Shall Know the Truth
    • 45. The Lord Takes a Sleeping Pill
    • 46. Giant
    • 47. A Gamblin’ Man
    • 48. Welcome Mr. Kennedy
    • 49. “El Degüello” Reprise
    • 50. The Voice of God
    • 51. The Tower
    • 52. Vigil on the Pedernales
    • 53. A Side to Belong To
    • 54. Don’t Be So Self-Righteous
    • 55. Baptism of Fire
    • 56. Texans versus Texans
  • Epilogue. Davy Crockett’s Fairy Palace
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
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