Texas Ranger Tales is a collection of legendary Texas Ranger stories, from new takes on the famous tales to fresh stories few, if any, have heard.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Texas Ranger Tales,
This review is from: Texas Ranger Tales: Stories That Need Telling (Paperback)
Mike Cox has written a fun, fact filled essay that is a quick and easy read. Each chapter is a separate story related to some past instance of Texas Ranger history. This book does not contain popular stories, in fact, most of the chapters cover obscure events, which makes it very interesting for true fans of this elite agency. I am afraid, however, that most people will not get much interest out of some of the chapters. I would have to disagree with Mr. Cox, and say that some of these stories really don't "need telling".
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not Stampeded,
By
This review is from: Texas Ranger Tales: Stories That Need Telling (Paperback)
Stephen F Austin once wrote during the early days of the Anglo settlement in Texas that he would "employ ten men to act as 'rangers' for the common defense." Thus were the famous Texas Rangers born. The Rangers are an important part of the history of Texas. About them have endured and evolved numerous myths and traditions. One of which is that the Texas Rangers could not be stampeded according to the late Colonel Homer Garrison.
Mike Cox tells folksy tales, the kind that we would all enjoy around a campfire. In the early 1870's Ranger Tedford and several other Rangers were scouting the headwaters of the Llano River. They were under strict orders not to shoot unless they came upon Indians. The order was mildly irritating to the Rangers until they crossed a hill and came upon a bear. What would they do? One Ranger suggested roping it. One can imagine what could have happened. Even the chapter where Cox tells about eating coyote is folksy. Comanches had attacked settlers in Coleman County in West Texas. The Rangers trailed the Indians across Runnels and Coke Counties into Nolan County. At that point the Rangers were running out of supplies and there was no game around except ... a coyote. Years later a Ranger named Rogers recalled that another Ranger named Elkins was so hungry he ate a half-quarter of the coyote. "Pass the coyote, please."
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Stories that did not need telling,
By
This review is from: Texas Ranger Tales: Stories That Need Telling (Kindle Edition)
Texas Ranger Tales by Mike Cox does not live up to its subtitle, "Stories That Need Telling." The book is a compilation of after notes and leftovers from history and laboriously expounded upon. Each chapter is a stand-alone story, and each ended with me hoping the next might hold my interest through the book. It didn't.
For instance, the chapter "Pass The Coyote, Please!" documents a hungry group of Rangers traveling during the winter. Game is so scarce, they kill and eat a coyote. That's it. The author drags the incident out into a full chapter by adding historical documentation about civilizations that did or did not eat coyote. "Corporal Wilson's Ride" is a detailed account of a group of Texas Rangers that road through the night to intercept a would-be bank robbery and were too late. The following chapter, "The Killing of `Caige' Grimes" is a continuation of the previous boring chapter, documenting the early life of the person killed in the gunfight of the would-be robbery the Rangers missed. Each chapter left me wishing I had the book that these insignificant details were left out of. I can only speak for the first half of the book, because I gave up half the way through it and move on to my next book.
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