Haunting the Graveyard: Unearthing the Story of the Coker Settlement
Know it appears suspicious that a post about the author’s book that finally made it into print popped up as the most-read by you during the past year, but you actually were that kind.
Of course, the controversial redevelopment plans for Alamo Plaza still remain of grave concern for those who love San Antonio. Will the plaza be fenced in? Will the Texas General Land Office repurpose the buildings on the west side of the plaza as a new museum or bulldoze those important historic landmarks? So many design issues remain unresolved as we enter 2020.
The author always hope postcards sent back from other places help tease out the boulevardier in you, seducing you into traveling more and serving as helpful guides when you do.
The following list represents the posts you clicked most in 2019, with the number in parentheses representing rankings from six months ago.
- Postcard from the Coker Settlement: Following long gestation, book finally due to arrive, 2019
- Has Alamo Plaza fallen in the hands of ‘reverential’ caretakers? 2019 (2)
- How’s the GLO managing Alamo Plaza? Welcome to the faux Alamo. 2019 (3)

Hey, GLO. No faux Alamo. - Postcard from Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Italy: History with a horse hanging overhead, 2019, (5)
- The Madarasz murder mystery: Might Helen haunt Brackenridge Park? 2012 (7)
- The danger of playing hardball with our Library: Bookworms tend to vote, 2014
- Postcard from Oaxaca, Mexico: ‘I’ve a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.’ 2019
- Postcard from Mexico City: The Lord of Poison and potent relics, 2017
- Postcard from Sevilla, Spain: Foods steeped in tradition, 2019 (11)

Boquerones, fried anchovies, at El Rinconcillo in Sevilla, Spain - Postcard from Sevilla, Spain: The most celebrated mother in Spain, 2019
- Postcard from Malaga, Spain: Street Art, Part I, 2019
- Postcard from San Antonio Botanical Garden: Walking across Texas without leaving home, 2019

Thanks for dropping by. Would love to see comments anytime.




My nosiness was at the invitation of attorney Banks Smith, a trustee of the
I failed to heed the obvious warning signs – several Texas Ranger and Texas Historical markers indicating this turf is fertile with tales. At first their “voices” were mere whispered tidbits here and there. As I poked through mountains of information and interviewed their descendants, more and more of the occupants of those graves seemed to be shouting at me to include them. I heeded the call of as many as possible while trying to remain sane.
So in the near future, expect an invitation to make their acquaintance.* You will encounter some heart-breaking tragedies, a bit of mayhem and even an unsolved murder as their lives unfold in Haunting the Graveyard. Whether focused on the good or skeletons that popped out of the closet, the stories are shared with love for the entire community of farmers I have come to know over the past decade.
*In addition to availability at The Twig Book Shop at the signing, 
