Elizabeth Ashwood Davis (1977-2011)
While planning her wedding and shopping for a publisher, Tulsa author Elizabeth Ashwood Davis died suddenly in her
Shawna Lewis
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While planning her wedding and shopping for a publisher, Tulsa author Elizabeth Ashwood Davis died suddenly in her
Shawna Lewis
The most popular porn of the jav censored are in gossip, over the internet. Having Her plump, cherry red lips are
Joshua Kline
Mama dropped the needle and my heart jumped. It was fascinating, titillating, be-boppin’, foot stompin’, traffic
Deborah J. Hunter
Our first Sports Illustration by Jeremy Luther depicts the downtrodden--but not despairing--TU football
Jeremy Luther
“As a child I was a little afraid of clowns,” Steven Cater admitted while awaiting Clonky’s arrival at his son
Anna Kathleen Casey
A paved road in rural Oklahoma; on either side, miles of rolling grassland, the grass tall and pale with autumn. My
Gordon Grice
In this installment of True Tulsa, Michael Cooper presents a black and white portrait of the beloved Rabbi Marc
Michael Cooper
In the spring of 2009, a cohort of evangelical Southern Baptists under the nom du groupe “The Singing Men of
Denver Nicks
Not that it happens very often, but when asked who my favorite contemporary writer is, I always split it down the
Robert Dumont
While traveling Route 75, I’ve passed by an unassuming little shack hundreds of times. Years ago, when my dad and I
Jenny Sullivan
Michael "Goose" Dragoo is a longtime Tulsa drummer and vocalist in such acts as Soul Avengers and Jazzbos. In
Grant McClintock
Everybody who was in NYC that day has a story to tell. I was supposed to report to work at the New York Public
Bob Dumont
They were mostly dead by then, the girlfriends, mothers, and wives of the 1930s era gangsters who once dominated front
Laurence J. Yadon
In the valley the treetops are bandaged in a dirty gauze the fields lusty with flames set to startle another growing
Justin L. Bond
There was no screaming, victory dancing, or even wild applause. There were no bruises or scabs. As sports go, croquet
Shawna Lewis
When Richard Rashke’s The Killing of Karen Silkwood was published in 1981, it was a groundbreaking, whistle-blowing
Sarah Denton
As fitting a name as it is for a pub, “Ryan’s” looks out of place over the word “Mercadito.” Ryan’s looks
This Land
How well do any of us know our grandmothers? They are worthy of in-depth investigation, because behind the gentle,
Clara Nipper
Mutton busting is that curiosity tucked between lines of tall letters on rodeo posters, usually toward the bottom.
Natasha Ball
In the Tulsa dance and etiquette scene, Skilly Forsman was it. For 68 years, she taught kids of all ages to move with
Shawna Lewis
Littering the kitchen countertop was a mess of costumes, accessories, and makeup found typically in the back recesses
Rebekah Greiman
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 have been on a path the last few months directed by the winds. Following signs, much like a scavenger hunt, that lead
Erin Turner
When Richard Linihan was a boy, his mother dreamt that a horse bit her on the back of the neck. She couldn’t shake
Natasha Ball
Dottie Clark was thrilled when the judges named her first runner-up in the Mrs. Tulsa pageant. But her husband, Elmer,
Shawna Lewis
Amber Whitlatch puffed at her purple-red bangs, introducing herself and her husband Jeff from my porch. After the
Rebekah Greiman
There is a wonderful yet horrifying scene at the end of The Grey Zone, Tim Blake Nelson’s harrowing film about the
Brian Schwartz
One of Oklahoma’s great mysteries, either unknown to or ignored by most of its populace, is what became of a
Holly Wall
It’s the same old story: Boy with the funny last name meets girl and they marry. Boy and girl have three children
Rebekah Greiman
Two giant Aldabra tortoises with wide dark eyes are on the move around their scrubby domain. The front one stops. Not
Amy Leach
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
The true hero of the Tulsa Riots was A.J.Smitherman who preached law and order and condemned the mob. He was editor of
Ishmael Reed
This verse appeared on the front page of the Tulsa Daily World on November 15, 1917. EDITOR’S NOTE: “The tarring
F.L. Lanford
Eugene Brady Adkins was the grandson of W. Tate Brady, who came to Tulsa in 1890 and helped turn a tiny town into a
Shawna Lewis
The following is an anonymous document from the Governor John Walton Papers, on file in the Western History
This Land
In 1973, author and two-time Libertarian presidential candidate Harry Browne published How I Found Freedom in an Unfree
Natasha Ball
Project Nim opens September 9 at the Circle Cinema, 10 S. Lewis Ave. Bob Ingersoll will do question-and-answer
Joshua Kline
The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 made national headlines on June 1 of this year, its 90th anniversary. Tulsa quietly
J. Kavin Ross
I watched a man I’d just met lug what looked like an industrial tricycle into the middle of an open soccer field. He
Natasha Ball
It’s not every day that the average Oklahoman gets to see an elephant raise a circus tent. Even photographer Kenneth
Rosie LoVoi
The monstrous, three-story, steel reinforced, stucco building towered along the western edge of Greenwood. It dominated
Steve Gerkin
Our town typically names streets, schools, sometimes-entire neighborhoods and commercial districts after people who
James O. Goodwin
The day Raffe died, rockets exploded in the skies over Tulsa and beyond— festive bursts of red, white, and blue,
This Land
RUMBLE FISH SCREENING--Public Secrets #13 Francis Ford Coppola's 1983 film Rumble Fish, based on the novel by SE
This Land
Kafka called his unfinished novel The Man Who Disappeared. But the fact that nobody outside academia does so is
James Hawes
When I first saw him, Jose Antonio Pantoja Hernández was standing behind a display of several of his paintings. Just
Michael Mason
It was built to be our state headquarters but ended up being home to Okemah’s Freemasons. Now that
Shawna Lewis
Something goes on here, the echo magic. We step over the spot and echoes bounce from our voices. The warehouse,
Ann Zoller
The curtains parted and the crowds applauded as Wilson Lema and Danielle Cap-Lema danced across the stage. In
Rebekah Greiman
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
Guide the scalpel with milk-wrinkled hands fine-honed point tracing delicate veins. Gently peel back transparent
John Wooley
I bartend at a pub constructed predominantly of wood. We don’t do flaming Dr Peppers, Spanish coffees, or any other
Laura Carrera
Sitting at the bar in Doe’s Eat Place, I gazed up Quincy Street daydreaming a nostalgic movie reel of an era gone by.
Steve Gerkin
When he was 22—old enough to know better— Anton Von Ostendorf ran away with the circus. A gymnast, ballet
Holly Wall
New Orleans-born, South Carolina-raised Grace Grothaus moved to Tulsa only four years ago, but her influence in the
Michael Cooper
My wife was running out of makeup. “You should wait and get it in Buenos Aires,” I told her. “It’s the Paris
Russell Cobb
Methodist church basement, northwest Oklahoma City, 1987. Yes, there is wood paneling. Yes, the carpet is shag, a rich
Thomas Conner
I called ahead. The hostess at Crow Creek Tavern said former American Idol contestant Matt Breitzke—the Oklahoman
Shawna Lewis
They say that you should never follow a girl, but I did. I followed an Oklahoma peach to Oklahoma. She lured me out of
Jason D. Westenburg
In Pampa, Texas, Guthrie lived through the catastrophe that would enable him to identify with many of the migrants he
Will Kaufman
His mother said it was Oklahoma that was making him nuts, blaming the whole state when the only place he ever went was
Lori Ostlund
Kismet brought Matthew Edwards and Toni Willis to OSU OU in 1995, but music brought them together. Edwards, then a
Rebekah Greiman
Just outside Bokoshe, Oklahoma is a winding stretch of properties known as “the loop.” The land is heavily wooded
Gene Perry
Checotah (AP)—Tim Rutledge, a local meat inspector, and his wife signed a national letter of intent Tuesday morning
Beau Adams
On December 14, 1972, the New York Times ran an article with the headline, “Woody Guthrie’s hometown is divided on
Joshua Kline
Andrew Bones is a percussionist for several Tulsa-based bands, including The Panda Resistance and
Michael Cooper
Woodrow Wilson Guthrie was named in the summer of 1912 on a hope that his namesake would become President, and he did.
Larry Guthrie
Behold, in the day of your fast you seek your own pleasure and oppress all your workers. - Isaiah 58: 3 Our song
Thomas Conner
Mock-tiled carpet, beige and hypnotic, spreads out beneath a grim gunmetal ceiling that is broken only by the central
Sarah Szabo
Jaruwan Slovacek had to cross an ocean to find love, but Ray Slovacek took on the tougher journey of crossing over to
Rebekah Greiman
Moving to New York was a no-brainer. When I was a 2-year-old, my father took me on my first harbor boat. He wrapped his
Juan Reinoso
Under the overpass at I-44 and Yale, past the construction that slowly but surely progresses, the boulevard widens to
This Land
The developers of Gateway Plaza wanted a politically neutral moniker for the project they hoped would set off a new era
Denver Nicks
Eccentric street musician David Horne serenades his beloved companion,
Michael Cooper
George Matson is a particularly beloved figure in the Southern Hills community, where he spent fifty five years with
Michael Cooper
Dental records proved the badly decomposed body that washed up on the Crystal Beach shores of Ontario, minus hands and
Steve Gerkin
There’s a field, straddling an invisible property line several miles east of the Hard Rock Casino, somewhere in the
Joshua Kline
The 1970 Cole’s Cross Reference Directory—an avocado-green volume in the corner of the fourth floor of Central
Natasha Ball
Locked away in a bedroom-turned-workshop is T-Town fashionista Valentin Esparza, whose designs have taken the city by
Michael Cooper
The Tulsa Police Department is arguably the most embattled police force in the country. Rocked by a recent corruption
Michael Mason
Write a note of affirmation with a good fountain pen and thick creamy paper and put it in your purse, wallet or lunch,
Sam Lipsyte
The white ’75 Buick Regal races through the red light at 51st Street and careens left onto 129th East Avenue. Tulsa
Joshua Kline
Growing up in Oklahoma was a great education in life, as it opened my eyes to the racism, classism and hate in the
Gary Dotterman
I’m a fiction writer, but I’m not a very good creative writer. Like a lot of writers, I steal shamelessly from
Larry Baker
Gilded guns and rusted relics dominate the tabletops that stretch end to end across the QuikTrip Center, covering both
Sarah Szabo
Big Time Pawn is a family-owned pawn shop located on Route 66 at 11th and Pittsburg in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Over the years
Lee Roy Chapman
The former home of Academy Award winnng nominated director of Badlands and Thin Red Line Terrence Malick is located
Lee Roy Chapman
As you loop along a curve on Interstate 244, downtown Tulsa drifts across the windshield, floating atop the fringe of
Justin Taylor
Big Time Pawn is a family-owned pawn shop located on Route 66 at 11th and Pittsburg in
Lee Roy Chapman
Tulsa’s court records are unpoliced and up for grabs. The DA’s office doesn’t feel obligated to report police
This Land
The question, “Have you always been this way?” causes Jim Elmore to grin. “What, nomadic?” he asks. “My
Rebekah Greiman
They met as softball rivals but wouldn’t compete for long. “We weren’t on the same team,” Toni Hill
Shawna Lewis
Mortals who decided to check out the comic book exploits of Thor after enjoying the thunder god’s adventures at the
James Vance
Composed by Chris Combs for the Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey and Horn Quintet Chris Combs wondered if there was
Denis McGilvray
In 1997, when Clyde Snow agreed to investigate claims from the Tulsa Race Riot, the forensic anthropologist was at the
Kevin O'Connor
For those of you who don't subscribe to This Land, you're missing out on one of the most intriguing stories buzzing
This Land
It’s been a longstanding Tulsa truism for artists: if you want to be successful, leave. At This Land Press, we’re
Michael Mason
Gaudy Liar In 1856, the appearance of the action-packed Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, Mountaineer,
Michael Wallis
Many factors have influenced settlement patterns in Tulsa, but a difficult question persists: Why is Tulsa,
This Land
The June 2011 issue of This Land is indeed a machine that demands accountability. But it also delivers some of the most
This Land