The Homestead
The cruiser cab hummed all around WilDer, nearly electric with the energy of corralled students on holiday. Mal, a live
Paige Duke
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The cruiser cab hummed all around WilDer, nearly electric with the energy of corralled students on holiday. Mal, a live
Paige Duke
J.M. Hall, the often-called Father of Tulsa who partnered with his brother H.C. in the early 1880s to build Tulsa’s
Natasha Ball
I climbed the remnants of Standpipe Hill on a recent, windy, early morning with a Wal-Mart canvas chair and a cup of
Steve Gerkin
On a rolling hill, wedged between downtown Tulsa and the mixed residential of Carson Heights, sits a small park with a
Spencer McCoy
Eighty-one-year-old Chris Rhodes has been eating the same thing in the same restaurant for 71 percent of his eating
This Land
On a recent Tuesday morning, around 36 8-year-olds and I were watching a bright yellow longhorn cowfish bob around its
Ginger Strand
"I saw that the name you put to a thing depended on where you stood and where it stood. And… and here’s the
Kyle Walker
The initial idea of the compilation of this work was to give the reading public an authentic record of the private life
Geronimo and S.M. Barrett
When he was 22—old enough to know better— Anton Von Ostendorf ran away with the circus. A gymnast, ballet
Holly Wall
In 1962, as John Steinbeck accepted the Nobel Prize for Literature in Sweden, George Girouard scoured Oklahoma creek
Steve Gerkin
The prison print shop was in a two-story building across from male clothing, and above me on the upper floor was the
Mickey Owens
In Search of Lennon's Lost Letter to Oral Roberts In the early 1970s, Oral Roberts’ evangelical TV program was at
Lindsey Neal
When Oral Roberts was 16, afflicted with tuberculosis and convinced he was going to die, a voice came to him out of the
David Fritze
The last time, he was sitting on a stump in a cone of yellow light and cigarette smoke, and the bats
Markham Johnson
From out of the West had come the word that the Great Spirit was going to right the wrongs visited upon His red
Donald N. Brown
In the early 1970s, Tulsa delivered two of the world’s most promising young photographers, Larry Clark and Gaylord
Grant McClintock
The following article is excerpted from the book, The Late American Novel: Writers on the Future of Books
Michael Mason
The avian flu morphs yet again. (Those flu viruses are so adept at evolving.) The pigs had the flu, as did the
Rivka Galchen
When I reached the register to pay for my lunch, I explained to Barry Rogers that I was writing a piece about
Claire Spears
There is a wonderful yet horrifying scene at the end of The Grey Zone, Tim Blake Nelson’s harrowing film about the
Brian Schwartz
(Written while listening to the Andrew Hill Quintet) The French horn strays, then joins with upside-down notes, the
Bill Turley
From Escape Velocity: A Charles Portis Miscellany, published October 2012 by Butler Center Books, edited by Jay
Charles Portis
If you’d have talked to Washington Irving the night before he set out from Fort Gibson on his 1832 romp through Green
Natasha Ball
One night early in my teenage years my father and uncle commanded me into the back seat of a pickup truck that belonged
Brian Ted Jones
Although Tulsa’s Cain’s Ballroom later became famous for catching future superstars like U2, The Police, and Van
John Wooley & Brett D. Bingham
The “yield” sign is a common occurrence in the apartment of 91-year-old Veda Riggs. There’s the yellow
Kristi Eaton
Where I come from, rain is the same thing as love, Falling rarely, and spoken about even less. Daddy tells me the
Preston Wells
I moved off campus my junior year at Long Island University into a second-floor room of a home in the cheerful village
Cheryl Pallant
Editor's note: Buckley's company, Grocio, reported on below, has launched its website. Visit www.grocio.com to learn
Lindsey Neal
In the spring of 1962, Oklahoma City received a new resident: an adolescent bull elephant named Tusko, brought over
Steve Sherman
where the road descends steeply as it twists like gorgeous wreckage and there is always brightness like
Jeffrey Skemp
In the fall of 2011, hordes of young people set up tent communities in front of government and financial buildings
Amy Gastelum
Located at 319 S. Main, the Drexel Building once housed the local clothiers Renberg's. This location has been etched
Lee Roy Chapman
Editor's note: On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Ford Beckman, the subject of this story, died at his home in Tulsa. He
Michael Mason
She couldn’t resist the photographs online, or the sellers’ description: Adorable Cape Cod with walk-out
Aimee Parkison
The following is an interview with Allen Ginsberg originally published by the University of Tulsa’s student newspaper
Jim Edwards
From the earliest periods of our nation’s history, thoughtful leaders have worried about the dangers posed by
David L. Boren
Sing with me, sing for the year, sing for the laughter and sing for the tears. —Aerosmith, “Dream On” Tommy
Eddie Chuculate
After thirty-four days of rain we wake to mallards navigating the back lawn and four survivor squirrels beached on
Markham Johnson
Jeanie Harris met “Dust Bowl poet” Wilma Elizabeth McDaniel at just the right time: long after she had been
Shawna Lewis
Watch any television newscast, read any newspaper, and you’ll know that humans are fascinated with catastrophe.
Connie Cronley
The most popular porn of the jav censored are in gossip, over the internet. Having Her plump, cherry red lips are
Joshua Kline
It was Sunday afternoon, April 3, 1892, still and sultry, with a black cloud lying ominously back in the west and
Francis Moore Milburn
William Clifford Bryson III walked into the viewing room of Oklahoma’s execution chamber clutching his
RJ Young
Founded in 1899, eight years before Oklahoma was even a state, the First Baptist Church of North Tulsa is one of
Joshua Kline
Headlines, like alarms, rang out: “Historic Bar Burns in Okarche” and “Famous Eischen’s Called Total Loss.”
This Land
I've been listening to Chet Baker’s music as I write. He doesn’t sing on these tracks—though he’s a great
Joe OShansky
When GM decommissioned the Parade of Progress, 12 Futurliners went up for sale. We know that a couple of them found
This Land
I stepped carefully into a small, black bass boat with four near strangers, one of them offering his hand to guide
Holly Wall
In the aftermath of the Creek County fires—during another triple-digit stretch in an already parched Oklahoma—This
Sheilah Bright
see brady see brady now a ghost of tulsa’s flitting past wandering the old streets without aim ambition or
Walt Kosty
A story is unfolding in Tulsa, right under your nose. It's about a building. You wouldn't know much about it if you
Michael Mason
That-which-regions is an abiding expanse which, gathering all, opens itself, so that in it openness is
David Bearden
If you were lucky enough to see Levon Helm & the Barn Burners on tour in this region a few years ago, you probably
Tamara Logsdon Hawkinson
When I first saw him, Jose Antonio Pantoja Hernández was standing behind a display of several of his paintings. Just
Michael Mason
On January 29, 1903, an ambitious 29-year-old named Edward King Gaylord purchased interest in a struggling newspaper
Joshua Kline
Don’t believe what you have heard. This ain’t an easy place to live. People warn you when you are new to the
Mark Chandler
One of the most gratifying moments of my life as a sports fan came when I was 20 years old, and Oklahoma beat Nebraska
Nathan Gunter
Last Friday, Tulsa Police Chief Chuck Jordan issued a statement addressing This Land Press and its coverage of the
Vincent LoVoi
In late May 1940, Woody Guthrie was riding high in New York City. Although Guthrie had already made a name for himself
Richard Higgs
The story of Robert S. Kerr begins in the sticks and ends in the stars. Born in a tiny, log cabin near the trading post
Steve Gerkin
Since April is National Poetry Month, we’re pleased to run poems by a pair of younger writers who participated in the
Bryonia Liggins
I grew up in Tulsa, but was raised knowing next to nothing about the Race Riot of 1921. Though I considered myself
Adrian Margaret Brune
Was Nede Wade “Ned” Christie a bloody outlaw or a wrongfully accused Cherokee patriot? That was the question in
Kent F. Frates
Arnel Plumbly can see it before it happens, and he moves out of the way just in time. The surrey’s wheels hit the
Allison Amend
Henryetta native Jean-Paul Philippe returns to his Oklahoman roots with a show opening today at Aberson Exhibits. A
This Land
In the public discourse, the desperate people pouring over the border in search of work were described as an “influx
Thomas Conner
Though alternative journalism traces its roots to the muckrakers of the early 1900s, the alternative newsweekly as we
Holly Wall
The last time I played for a sports team that wasn't digital was in the summer of 1989, if memory serves, in the
Nathan Gunter
The woman in the grocery store on Sunset stopped me in the produce, her claws about my shoulders, to bless me on
Lynn Melnick
The University of Oklahoma is built on the Permian Redbed Plains. When I arrived, there were only a few buildings of
John Joseph Mathews
The case gave Justice Kagan a headache. Justice Ginsburg described parts of it as “sketchy,” and Justice Breyer
Ginger Strand
Mark Freeman Jr. was just across the Kansas line from his 3,500-acre cattle ranch. It was in the early 1950s when he
Jason Christian
The former home of Academy Award winnng nominated director of Badlands and Thin Red Line Terrence Malick is located
Lee Roy Chapman
Not all prophets operated with the same proclivities, and so Pentecostal and Baptist officials faced distinct
Darren Dochuck
Transcendence? That’s a ten-dollar word, Delbert. But yeah, I’ve got one for you. This happened the summer I was
Steve Garrison
“Wake up.” My sister was shaking my shoulder, and not gently. I opened one eye. According to the clock on my
Jennifer Latham
An important, yet often overlooked, dimension of Bruce Goff’s contribution to American architecture was his years
Arn Henderson
Tate Brady, as Lee Roy Chapman points out, did a lot of good for Tulsa, but the positives came with lots of negatives.
Alfred L. Brophy
Oklahoma has its fair share of tourist spots: Several roadside attractions line the highways. There are 35 state parks,
This Land
Tami Teeters saved three things before her Mannford home was engulfed by a wildfire in August of last year: a pair of
Matt Leach
Mutton busting is that curiosity tucked between lines of tall letters on rodeo posters, usually toward the bottom.
Natasha Ball
Mutton busting is that curiosity tucked between lines of tall letters on rodeo posters, usually toward the bottom.
Natasha Ball
Under the overpass at I-44 and Yale, past the construction that slowly but surely progresses, the boulevard widens to
This Land
Everyone who knew him called him Taco. I didn’t know him. I called him Pat. It was 1997 when I met him. He was a
Collin Hinds
Preston Peavy, a baseball hitting coach, uses kinematics in his Atlanta training facility to study the properties
Beau Adams
The November race for Oklahoma’s 3rd Congressional District, which spills out of the Panhandle and fills the western
Matt Lardner
One night in 1997, a concerned neighbor called John and Kris (Ratzlaff) Gosney of Cheyenne Valley, Oklahoma, with a
R.E. Graalman Jr.
A black bear has come out of the hills to the highway. He lumbers along the shoulder and throws a great paw out. A
Karin C. Davidson
White sun hangs just above the falls. You look upstream at cascading water immersed in sound, frozen by its
Ken Hada
Wednesday, June 9, 1982 In the news in Tulsa, Oklahoma: “Rotarians change laws to allow black members.” “She
Randy R Potts
Edwin spotted them the moment he stepped off the train. There were dozens of folks here to meet the Atlantic and
Louise Farmer Smith
He stood naked by the roadside with a blanket draped around his hips, feebly reaching out for the glimmering cars as
Michael Mason, Chris Sandel and Lee Roy Chapman
In 2010, Tamra Schmidkunz sat in a dark car outside the Rib Crib on 51st Street and Sheridan Avenue in Tulsa. She was
James A. Pearson
Native Americans within the uprooted “Five Civilized Tribes” found a new home in “Indian Territory”—
Hannibal B. Johnson
At the front of Meeting Room A at the Case Community Center in Sand Springs sat a projector on a metal stand, humming
Natasha Ball
Painter, illustrator, sculptor, husband, father, innovator, teacher: Oklahoman Allan Houser was all of these things and
Christina Burke
Autumn. 2010. 1946 South Harvard. Tulsa, Oklahoma. I’m slouched in my car in the parking lot of QuikTrip counting
Van Eden
The wind came sweeping down the plain and shot me in the face with a load of dust and gravel. It blew pejsebrænde
This Land
There's hardly anything about McAlester, Oklahoma, that Steve Adams doesn’t know. For 35 years, he’s been the local
Brooks Nickell