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Vaquero

Genesis of the Texas Cowboy

Vaquero( )
Author: Wittliff, William D.
Wittliff, Bill
Introduction by: Graves, John
ISBN:978-0-292-70557-9
Publication Date:Apr 2004
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $39.95
Book Description:

In the early 1970s, noted Texas historian Joe Frantz offered Bill Wittliff a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity--to visit a ranch in northern Mexico where the vaqueros still worked cattle in the traditional ways. Drawn to this land-out-of-time again and again, Wittliff photographed the vaqueros as they went about daily chores that had changed little since the first Mexican cowherders learned to work cattle from a horse's back. In the tradition of the great cowboy photographer Erwin...
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Book Details
Pages:176
Detailed Subjects: Social Science / Sociology / Rural
Social Science / Customs & Traditions
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):12.25 x 8.25 x 1 Inches
Book Weight:2.774 Pounds
Author Biography
Wittliff, William D. (Author)


Bill Wittliff is a screenwriter who was born and raised in Texas. He is best known for his adaptation of Larry McMurty's Pulitzer Prize-wining western novel "Lonesome Dove" inot a hit mini-series. The series retold Mr. McMurtry¿s 1985 novel about two former Texas Rangers on a cattle drive to Montana as a four-part, eight-hour saga in 1989. Wittliff had developed a strong affinity for the outsize mythology and history of Texas. He had also become a prominent cultural figure in Austin.

He and his wife had owned a small press that published books by writers from Texas and other parts of the Southwest. They had also begun a university archive, the Southwestern Writers Collection, filled with manuscripts and artifacts. He had also written the screenplays for a number of films set in Texas, among them 'Raggedy Man' (1981), in which Sissy Spacek played a character based on his mother, who raised her two sons as a small-town telephone switchboard operator.

Bill Witliff passed away from a heart attack on 06/09/2019 at the age of 79.

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