Clay Reynolds’ Pandemic Television Log 2020-2021
Blog
Cover Art
One aspect of publishing that most writers are often frustrated by is how the final published book will look. Many novice writers talk about what kind of dust jacket or cover art they anticipate, and many labor under the misapprehension that they will have some say-so about it. They won’t. Decisions about dust jackets and… Continue reading Cover Art
The Tentmaker
When the Civil War ended, Gil Hooley journeyed out West, figuring that if there was any market left for his hand-crafted tents, it would be on the wide open frontier. But when his wagon breaks down in the middle of nowhere, a community begins to grow around him, one tent at a time, until Gil finds himself the unlikely leader-and defender-of his own town. Clay Reynolds tells the tale of a man who discovers that even if a place wasn’t your destination, it might still be your destiny.
Of Snakes & Sex & Playing in the Rain
These fourteen personal essays by one of Texas’ most prolific authors are in turn humorous, literary, informative, nostalgic and all-around enjoyable to read.
Early Innings
The guys who coach and who know him respect him, and most all the kids are afraid of him, although he’s probably not more than five-six, five-seven–weighs maybe one-thirty-five or one-forty an hour after he eats a big dinner…
Monuments: A Novel
As the locals gear up to stop the railroad, long-held secrets about both the town and the protagonist’s family come to light, and he is caught up in the conflict to save his home town, and his family’s legacy.
Sandhill County Lines: Stories
Author Clay Reynolds sees these stories as reflective fragments, “the kind one notices when driving through North Central Texas—old buildings and houses, each concealing a story.”
From Castro to Cancun
Clay Reynolds wrote about his 2013 trip to Cuba with other members of the Texas Institute of Letters.
Vox Populi: A Novel of the Common Man
A nameless and sometimes hapless narrator moves through a series of casual encounters, mostly in the Southwest, with total strangers, average people going about day-to-day, often mundane activities, but taking time to reveal to him, unprompted, their life experiences.
The Hero of a Hundred Fights
The Wild West came alive under the pen of Edward Zane Carroll Judson, who wrote many of America’s best-loved “dime novels ”under the pseudonym Ned Buntline.