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Bøker utgitt av Texas Tech Press,U.S.

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  • - A Legal History of Texas
    av Michael S. Ariens
    557,-

    "An overarching history of the law and legal culture of Texas, particularly investigating the days of early settlement through 1920; Texas's law of property, families, and businesses; criminal law and tort law; and the Texas legal profession"--Provided by publisher.

  • - Courting Judicial Mayhem, Texas Style
    av Bill Neal
    373 - 557,-

    From the 1880s until after World War I, Texas prosecutions for adultery, fornication, rape, seduction, and sodomy were many, but formal penal code seemed insufficiently stringent to southerners, who often sought other redress. This title presents the 'honor defense' in six celebrated murder trials, 1896-1977.

  • av Curt Sampson & Paul Milosevich
    12 319,-

    'Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson, Ben Crenshaw, Judy Rankin, Tom Kite, Fred Cobb, Harvey Penick, Babe Zaharias, Lee Trevino... the list of Texas golf legends reads like the leader board of an imaginary 20th-Century Golf Greats Invitational. This work features portraits and interviews of fifty golfers.

  • - Texas on the Vine
    av Russell D. Kane
    511 - 557,-

    In his pursuit of Texas terroir, the sense of place manifest in Texas wine country's sun-baked soils, variable climate, and human intervention, Russell Kane has travelled the state tasting wine, interviewing the major players in Texas wine culture, and reflecting on the state's extraordinary history and enterprising peoples. Here is the total immersion experience.

  • - Those Other Southwestern Swing Bands, Past and Present
    av Jean A. Boyd
    1 124,-

    "Chronicles western swing bands popular in Texas and Oklahoma during the Great Depression and World War II; also investigates contemporary western swing renaissance. Includes music transcription and analysis"--Provided by publisher.

  • - Debating Texas Identity
    av Alwyn Barr & Glen Sample Ely
    633,-

    Examines Texas' historical DNA, making sense of Lone Star identity west of the hundredth meridian and defining Texas's place in the American West. Focusing on the motives that shape how Texans appropriate their past - from cashing in on tourism to avoiding historical realities - Glen Sample Ely reveals the inner workings of a multiplicity of Texas identities.

  • - Community Property Law in Spain and Early Texas
    av Jean A. Stuntz
    465 - 633,-

    In the Texas Republic, Spanish law came to be seen as more equitable than English common law in certain areas, especially womens rights, and some Spanish traditions were adopted into Texas law. This title explores the evolution of Castilian law during the Spanish Reconquest and how those laws came to the New World and Texas.

  • - A Doctor's Story
    av Steven L. Berk
    389,-

    "Tells the story of Steven L. Berk, M.D., who was kidnapped from his home in Amarillo, Texas, in March of 2005. Shows how Berk used his experiences and training as a physician to survive the ordeal and bring his captor to justice"--Provided by publisher.

  • av Susan Cummins Miller
    358,-

    Jorge was the brother of the MacFarlane family's longtime fishing guide; Carla, girlfriend of Frankies brother. But when the Tucson murder victims turn out to be Frankies colleague, Frankie joins the hunt for the killers, bringing her geologists eye and analytical skills to aid sheriffs detective Toni Navarro and private investigator Philo Dane.

  • - National Security, Public Safety, and Illegal Immigration along the U.S.-Mexico Border
    av Robert Lee Maril
    557,-

    Through first-person interviews with defense contractors, border residents, American military, Minutemen, county officials, Customs and Border Protection agents, environmental activists, and others whose voices have never been heard, Robert Lee Maril examines the 2,000-mile-long project to keep illegal immigrants, narcotics, and terrorists on the other side of the US-Mexico border.

  • av Linda M. Hasselstrom & Amy Hale Auker
    419,-

    From the Texas panhandle to the mountains of Arizona, Amy Auker has lived the cowboy life - as wife, as mother, as cook, as ranch hand, as writer. In fine-grained detail she captures the prairie light, the traffic on small farm-to-market roads, the vacant stillness of shipping pens when fall works are over. But she also captures the unmistakable westernness of the people and creatures around her.

  • - Oglala Lakota Politics from the IRA to Wounded Knee
    av Akim D. Reinhardt
    465 - 633,-

    Incorporating previously overlooked materials, including tribal council records, oral histories, and reservation newspapers, this title explores the political history of South Dakotas Oglala Lakota reservation during the mid-twentieth century.

  • av Michael Ventura, Dan Flores & Butch Hancock
    511 - 557,-

    Michael Ventura's owned only one car his entire life: a green '69 Chevy Malibu. Its wheels have crisscrossed the American landscape over more miles than a round trip to the moon. His essays convey a tactile and intimate relationship with land and people - and of course the car. In this collection the essays switch lanes with Hancock's evocative black-and-white photographs.

  • - Jerry Daniels, the Hmong and the CIA
    av Gayle L. Morrison
    710 - 1 445,-

    A former CIA officer led one hell of an interesting life, from Montana to Southeast Asia. Equally embraces a rowdy Western life, the brutal realities of ground war, and the beauty of tribal funeral rituals.

  • - The Embattled Birth of Austin, Texas
    av Jeffrey Stuart Kerr
    419 - 710,-

    Lofty dreams and harsh realities clash on the Texas frontier

  • - And Other True Stories from the Nebraska-Pine Ridge Border Towns
    av Stew Magnuson
    465 - 557,-

    Examining Raymond Yellow Thunders death at the hands of four white men in 1972, this title looks deep into the past that gave rise to the tragedy. It recounts the largely forgotten struggles of American Indian Movement activist Bob Yellow Bird and tells the story of Whiteclay, Nebraska, and the controversial border hamlet.

  • - How Justice Grew Up in the Outlaw West
    av Bill Neal
    373 - 557,-

    A companion volume to ""Getting Away with Murder on the Texas Frontier"" that takes readers from Mississippi to the frontiers of West Texas, Indian Territory, New Mexico Territory, and finally the frozen Montana wilderness through a series of linked, true-life tales of crimes and trials.

  • av Harry Mithlo
    557,-

    Tells the story of Watson Mithlo, Chiricahua Apache, his family, and his life. This story tells Watson's lived history as the Chiricahua were relocated from Arizona to Florida to Alabama and finally to Fort Sill, Oklahoma. But this is also a story of Harry Mithlo, Watson's son, and Conger Beasley, Harry's friend.

  • - The Later Writings of Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (Zitkala-A a)
    av P. Jane Hafen
    710,-

    Zitkala-a, also known as Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, was born on the Yankton Sioux reservation in 1876 and went on to become one of the most influential American Indian writer/activists of the twentieth century. ""Help Indians Help Themselves"" is a critical collection of primary documents written by Bonnin.

  • - The Art of Texas Mexican Cooking
    av Adan Medrano
    557,-

    From an early age, Chef Adan Medrano understood the power of cooking to enthrall, to grant artistic agency, and to solidify identity as well as succor and hospitality. In this second cookbook, he documents and explains native ingredients, traditional techniques, and innovations in casero (home-style) Mexican American cooking in Texas.

  • - The Later Writings of Gertrude Simmons-Bonnin (Zitkala-Sa)
    av Gertrude Simmons-Bonnin
    710,-

    Zitkala-i?1/2a, also known as Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, was born on the Yankton Sioux reservation in 1876 and went on to become one of the most influential American Indian writer/activists of the twentieth century. This book is a critical collection of primary documents written by Bonnin.

  • - The Architectural and Planning Heritage of Texas Tech University
    av Brian H. Griggs
    557,-

    Explores the campus architecture of the Texas Tech University System, which was inspired by the sixteenth-century Plateresque Spanish Renaissance architectural style. This book details the parallels between the buildings of Texas Tech and those of their forebears, while exploring the remarkable stories behind the construction itself.

  • - Indigenous Nationhood, Traditional Law, and the Covenants of the Cheyenne Nation
    av Leo K. Killsback
    802,-

    Spanning more than a millennium of antiquity and recovering stories and ideas interpreted from a Cheyenne worldview, this book's joint purpose is rooted as much in a decolonization roadmap as it is in preservation of culture and identity for the next generations of Cheyenne people.

  • - Poems
    av Claire Sylvester Smith
    419,-

    The Twenty-Sixth Winner of the Walt McDonald First-Book Prize in Poetry. Prospect/ comprises poems about vantage points, country and personhood, and the difficulty of understanding what is true.

  • - Indigenous Governance, Traditional Leadership, and the Warriors of the Cheyenne Nation
    av Leo K. Killsback
    802,-

    Before an indigenous people can decolonize, Leo Killsback explains, they must first understand what the world was like before colonization. Such understanding allows indigenous people to generate realistic goals and achieve positive change, reinventing themselves into people who can honour original ways without corrupting or disgracing them.

  • - Benjamin Murmelstein and the Fate of Viennese Jewry, Volume I: Vienna
    av Leonard H. Ehrlich
    1 124,-

    In 1973, Leonard and Edith Ehrlich chose to undertake a daunting task that would ultimately become their greatest work: conducting over thirty years of meticulous research to investigate and document Vienna's Jewish community and its leadership during the Holocaust.

  • - An Engineering Everything Adventure
    av Emily M. Hunt
    270,-

    Bells and Mitch, space aliens from the planet Exergy, come back to Earth for more exciting adventures in science! Our heroes dive deep into Earth's Pacific Ocean to solve a problem: how can they protect their home city on Exergy? Could the creatures living in the Pacific Ocean--who use camouflage to hide from predators--hold the answer?

  • - The Story of LaVern Roach
    av Frank Sikes
    465,-

    LaVern Roach, a skinny kid from the small town of Plainview, Texas, rose from obscurity to become one of boxing's most popular figures during the 1940s. West Texas Middleweight is the story of Roach's all too brief journey from a West Texas amateur, to enlistment in the US Marines, to becoming a Madison Square Garden main eventer.

  • av J.Knox Jones
    216,-

    Illustrated Key to Skulls of Genera of North American Land Mammals is a manual that contains illustrations of North American land mammals such as marsupials, shrews, bats, moles among many others. This manual is a well-illustrated key, useful for identifying mammals through cranial characteristics. It also contains line-drawings, and many photographs to aid in identifying related genera. The distribution, diversity, and characteristics of each order and family of land mammals found in North American and to the north of Mexico are briefly discussed. J. Knox Jones, Jr., was a practicing mammalogist for more than 40 years. He was a Paul Whitfield Horn Professor of Biological Sciences at Texas Tech and a Curator at the Museum of Texas Tech University. Jones authored or edited 14 books among is more than 350 publications, and has studied mammals on five continents. He was a past president of the American Society of Mammalogists and was awarded the C. Hart Merriam Award, the H. H. T. Jackson Award, and Honorary Membership by that society. In 1992, he was selected as Texas Distinguished Scientist of the Year by the Texas Academy of Science, and was awarded the Donald W. Tinkle Research Excellence Award by the Southwestern Association of Naturalists. Richard W. Manning is a member of the faculty of Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos. He has authored more than 40 publications, most of which deal with mammals. Manning has had considerable instructional experience in laboratories in mammalogy, and has been cited for his excellence in teaching. He is also an avid field biologist, and thus has studied mammals in their natural habitats as well. Manning took most of the photographs used in this laboratory manual and made many of the line drawings.

  • - A Holocaust Love Story
    av Charles S. Weinblatt
    603,-

    In 1939, seventeen-year-old Austrians Jacob Silverman and Rachael Goldberg are bright, talented, and deeply in love. Because they are Jews, their families lose everything: their jobs, possessions, money, contact with loved ones, and finally their liberty. Jacob and Rachael and their families are removed from their comfortable Austrian homes into a decrepit ghetto where they are forced to live in squalor. From there, the families are sent to the Nazi concentration camp Theresienstadt, where Rachael and Jacob secretly become man and wife. Revel in their excitement as they escape through a harrowing tunnel and join local partisans to fight the Nazis. Ride the fetid train to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where only slavery, sickness, brutality, and death await. Stung by the death of loved ones, enslaved and starved, the young lovers have nothing to count on but faith, love, and courage.

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