Cox says the narrowing of a list of the best Ranger books down to just five is, like the old “one Ranger, one riot" legend, easy to say, hard to do. Here are his top six:
Six Years with the Texas Rangers, 1875-1881 (James B. Gillett, Andesite Press): The best nineteenth-century Ranger memoir is James B. Gillett’s. First published in 1921, it remains in print for good reason. It is highly readable and full of insight into the life and duties of the Frontier Battalion-era Ranger.Rico says that Cox always does a good job; Rico owns most of these books...
Trails and Trials of a Texas Ranger (W.W. Sterling, University of Oklahoma Press): The best early twentieth-century memoir is Bill Sterling’s. Privately published in 1957 shortly before the old Ranger’s death, this book was out of print for a while, but the University of Oklahoma Press brought it back to life in 1969, and it remains in print today.
One Ranger: A Memoir (Joaquin Jackson, University of Texas Press): The best late-twentieth-century memoir, a fine inside look at the modern-day Texas Ranger’s life is the late Ranger Joaquin Jackson’s. Published in 2005, it remains that publisher’s top-selling book to date. Texas author David Marion Wilkinson worked with Jackson in writing the book.
Yours to Command: The Life and Legend of Texas Ranger Captain Bill McDonald (Harold J. Weiss, University of North Texas Press) and Texas Ranger John B. Jones (Rick Miller, University of North Texas Press): The best nineteenth-century ranger biographies are a draw. Captain Bill, as he was known, contributed heavily to the Ranger legend and Weiss does a great job sorting out truth and fiction in this work. Jones served as the first major of the Frontier Battalion when it was created in 1874, and rose to the position of state adjutant general before his early death in 1881.
Texas Ranger: The Epic Life of Frank Hamer, the Man Who Killed Bonnie and Clyde (John Boessenecker, Thomas Dunne Books): Boessenecker’s new book is the best twentieth-century Ranger biography. Hamer served as a Ranger from 1906 through the early 1930s. Bossenecker successfully argues that the publicity Hamer garnered for the Rangers in the killing of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow helped save the Rangers from the legislative axe.
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