Lon tinkle biography of barack
•
Yes, I was born right here in Dallas and grew up in North Texas. My father, my grandfather was a rancher farmer in Rockwall, Texas. I was 30 miles north, and my great-grandfather founded the Rockwall, and I grew up in Dallas in Ocliffe. My father loved nature of everything else, and he felt that Ocliffe was the most beautiful area in Dallas, and some of it is indeed. He loved life-fragged Oby to be self-sufficient and to live off the land if possible. But he had this tremendous love and feeling for nature, and for things that grow and that
you make grow, he gave him a creative sense, and I suppose all his sons picked up from my father that this great love of the outdoors, and this sense that we belonged in it, that if you just walked on the soil, something came up in through your feet into the whole personality. I had three great loves in my life, and not one of them has been work. The first was tennis, and I aspired to be the best tennis player in the United States. I would go
•
From the 1940s through the 1970s, Lon Tinkle was a brilliant presence in the Texas Institute of Letters as well as on the Texas and Southwestern literary scene. It’s no stretch to say the national literary scene, too.
He was a fifth-generation Texan whose ancestor fought at the Alamo; he was born in Oak Cliff in 1906 and earned two degrees on the north side of town at Southern Methodist University; he was a longtime book editor and critic at The Dallas Morning News;hewas a master teacher at SMU of French literature and cultural studies; he was a mentor to me and many others at SMU; and he was an elegant Francophile whose studies at the Sorbonne in Paris never seemed far away from his distinctive personality.
His primary forum to the general public and to intellectuals alike was on the books page of TheNews. His importance was that he understood the tradition of Texas and its writing with all its elements of frontier myth and its hard reality.
“We celebrate not a distrikt but
•
Lon Tinkle
American journalist
Julien Lon Tinkle (March 20, 1906 – January 11, 1980) was a historian, writer, book critic, and professor who specialized in the history of Texas. Tinkle, the long-time book editor and critic for the Dallas Morning News, was known for his award-winning books, including an engaging history of the battle of the Alamo and a biography of J. Frank Dobie.[1] He is the namesake for the Texas Institute of Letters' highest honor, the Lon Tinkle Award for Lifetime Achievement.[2]
Tinkle spent most of his life in Dallas, Texas, where he graduated from and later taught at Southern Methodist University.
Early life and education
[edit]Tinkle was born in Dallas, Texas on March 20, 1906 to James Ward Tinkle and Mary (née Garden) Tinkle. He attended Southern Methodist University in Dallas, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1927 and a Master of Arts degree in 1932. Tinkle then moved to Paris, where he studied at the S