Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

I’ll Tell You a Tale: An Anthology

Rate this book
I'll Tell You a Tale is a garland of some of Frank Dobie's best writing, put together by Isabel Gaddis, one of his former students at the University of Texas. The tales included are those the author himself liked best, and he even rewrote some of them especially for this anthology. Ben Carlton Mead has contributed 32 original line drawings to illustrate the stories. These tales spring from the soil and folklore of our land; but more than this, they make the readers contemporary with the times, filling us with the wonder of something past and yet still with us. They are arranged topically into sections whose titles speak for "The Longhorn Breed," "Mustangs and Mustangers," "The Saga of the Saddle," "Characters and Happenings of Long Ago," "Animals of the Wild," "In Realms of Gold," and "Ironies."

378 pages, Paperback

Published January 18, 1981

2 people are currently reading
78 people want to read

About the author

J. Frank Dobie

197 books51 followers
Called the "Storyteller of the Southwest," James Frank Dobie was born in 1888 on his family's cattle ranch in Live Oak County. During his long life, J. Frank Dobie would live astride two worlds: a rugged life on a Texas cattle ranch and the state's modern centers of scholarly learning.

Dobie came to Austin in 1914 to teach at the University of Texas. In time he pioneered an influential course on the literature of the Southwest. By the late 1920s, Dobie discovered his mission: to record and publicize the disappearing folklore of Texas and the greater Southwest. Dobie became secretary of the Texas Folklore Society, a position he held for 21 years.

J. Frank Dobie Dobie was a new kind of folklorist—a progressive activist. He called for UT to admit African-American students in the 1940s—long before the administration favored integration. Dobie's vocal politics led to his leaving the University in 1947, but he continued writing until his death in 1964, publishing over twenty books and countless articles.

The inscription on Dobie's headstone in the Texas State Cemetery reads: "I have come to value liberated minds as the supreme good of life on earth." J. Frank Dobie was not content to simply preserve Southwestern heritage within libraries and museums. He gave life to that heritage and informed generations of Texans about their rich history.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
15 (53%)
4 stars
10 (35%)
3 stars
3 (10%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for carl  theaker.
937 reviews54 followers
April 27, 2021
A thoroughly entertaining collection of Tales of Texas, Frank Dobie became one of the fathers of modern Texas literature by collecting stories from those who did the ranching, roundups,
and generally made a living in Texas in the late 1800s, though some of the tales go back even further, all of them are under the category of folklore. Some of the tales are realistic, how-things-were-done
stories, others are Tall tales, some a lot Taller than others.

Most of the stories are short, about 5 pages, and full of incidental information on the ways of driving the cattle, running a mustang, or just making do in the 'good old days' that none of us would want to
go through, well, except maybe for a weekend.

The anthology is divided into topics, each having about 8 stories in them. A few are:

longhorn breed

mustangs & mustangers

saga of the saddle

characters and happenings of long ago

animals of the wild

Frank Dobie is one of those famous enough, at least in Central Texas, to have buildings and scholarships named after him, but no one really knows who he is, or has read one of his books. I'm glad I caught up on this sampling of American literature on the Old West.
Profile Image for Bonnie Staughton.
420 reviews14 followers
May 20, 2017
"I'll Tell You a Tale: An Anthology" is a series of short, concise stories of the SouthWest part of the US. There are stories about cattle rustling, mustangs, outlaws, Longhorns, gold mining, etc. J. Frank Dobie is a really good story teller and all of the stories are colorful and keep your interest. There is a glossary at the end of Spanish-Mexican words which are used freely throughout the stories. Of the several books written by Mr. Dobie, this book is apparently made up of the stories that were his personal favorites.
Profile Image for Tom.
33 reviews10 followers
Read
May 24, 2008
One of the pleasures of exploring a new town is visiting the local independent bookstore (provided, of course, they're fortunate enough to have one still). I was in Fredericksburg, Texas, in early June and spotted a sign advertising "Texana, Texas Maps, and Used Books" in the window of Berkman Books on Main Street. I made a beeline. In the global age of B&N and Borders, when every bookstore stocks the same inventory, it seems rarer and rarer to find a shop that might tell you something about the locale.

In the Texana section, I zeroed in on the shelf of books by J. Frank Dobie. The titles were simple and descriptive: "Cow People," "The Longhorns," "The Mustangs," "Coronado's Children." I'd never heard of Dobie, a Texas native who wrote his first book in 1929 and died in ’64. He collected stories he heard over the years, some of them folktakes, some reminiscences by old-timers, some plain old tall tales. This volume is an anthology of his work. More details to come when I get further into it....
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.