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The Best I Recall

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Gary Cartwright is one of Texas's legendary writers. In a career spanning nearly six decades, he has been a newspaper reporter, Senior Editor of Texas Monthly, and author of several acclaimed books, including Blood Will Tell, Confessions of a Washed-up Sportswriter, and Dirty Dealing. Cartwright was a finalist for a National Magazine Award for reporting excellence, and he has won several awards from the Texas Institute of Letters, including its most prestigious—the Lon Tinkle Award for lifetime achievement. His personal life has been as colorful and occasionally outrageous as any story he reported, and in this vivid, often hilarious, and sometimes deeply moving memoir, Cartwright tells the story of his writing career, tangled like a runaway vine with great friendships, love affairs, four marriages, four or five great dogs . . . looking always to explain, at least to himself, how the pattern probably makes a kind of perverted sense.

Cartwright's career began at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and Fort Worth Press, among kindred spirits and fellow pranksters Edwin "Bud" Shrake and Dan Jenkins. He describes how the three rookie writers followed their mentor Blackie Sherrod to the Dallas Times Herald and the Dallas Morning News, becoming the "best staff of sportswriters anywhere, ever" and creating a new kind of sportswriting that "swept the country and became standard." Cartwright recalls his twenty-five years at Texas Monthly, where he covered everything from true crime to notable Texans to Texas's cultural oddities. Along the way, he tells lively stories about "rebelling against sobriety" in many forms, with friends and co-conspirators that included Willie Nelson, Ann Richards, Dennis Hopper, Willie Morris, Don Meredith, Jack Ruby, and countless others. A remarkable portrait of the writing life and Austin's counterculture, The Best I Recall may skirt the line between fact and fiction, but it always tells the truth.

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    • Kirkus

      The raunchy, raucous life of a Texas journalist.Reporter and screenwriter Cartwright (HeartWiseGuy, 1998, etc.), winner of the Texas Institute of Letters Lon Tinkle Award for Lifetime Achievement, displays his talents as a storyteller in this snappy memoir of his 50-year career. Praised for his writing by a high school teacher, the author gravitated to a degree in journalism; in 1958, he began a stint as sportswriter for the Fort Worth Press. There, he met two writers who became lifelong friends: Bud Shrake and Dan Jenkins. "Bud, Dan, and I drank together, plotted together, and talked nonstop about the books we intended to write," Cartwright recalls. Soon, the three moved on to the Dallas Times Herald and the Dallas Morning News, forming "the best staff of sportswriters anywhere, ever." In the 1960s, life in burgeoning Dallas was good, made better by beer, Dexedrine, and "the joyous and liberating effects of pot." Besides his career, Cartwright chronicles his four marriages and many girlfriends; children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren; and his travels, houses, restaurant feasts, and birthday parties. The deaths of his eldest son from leukemia and of his third wife from cancer are quiet and moving interludes in a tale that rolls merrily along. Cartwright recalls some of his big stories: a profile of the notorious stripper Candy Barr; a piece on satanic rituals allegedly perpetrated on children in day care; a sad portrait of a family on welfare, which won the 1977 Stanley Walker Award from the Texas Institute of Letters; and an expose of Filipino holy men who claimed they could perform medical miracles. These were contributions to Texas Monthly, where Cartwright found a welcome home and worked for 25 years. Although modesty does not seem one of the author's attributes, gratitude is, especially for good friends, such as Willie Nelson, Ann Richards, and, of course, Bud and Dan. A crisp, entertaining memoir from a happy man. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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