ExperienceA Love letter to Utopia
Rock House Utopia Texas

A Love letter to Utopia

‘’A Love letter to utopia
By Valerie J. Anderson
Reprinted with permission of the author’’
Linda Weber and her husband standing in Utopia Texas 2023

 

A note from Linda Weber:

*Fellow author and friend, Valerie J Anderson, put into words the most beautiful description of our trip to Utopia to launch my book FINDING UTOPIA. With her permission I share it here.

 

Main Street Utopia. A General store, antique store and all around “good things Utopia” store owned by Diane Causey. 

I recently returned from Utopia. It wasn’t an imagined place of perfect governance and social well-being, but it was pretty darn close.

Everything for everyone Store in Utopia Texas

Located in the Texas Hill Country next to the lazy Sabinal River, Utopia nestles among sprawling live oaks and gnarled and twisted cypress. It is a Camelot of golden buildings, caliche roads, and welcoming people weathered by the sun, time, or both. Utopia is small. But it is booming. There were 99 people in 2012; now there are 211. And it’s no wonder.

Everything anyone needs can be found on Main Street. Walls full of memories and the occasional trophy head surround spotless 1950s linoleum tables and mismatched chairs. The café is a place where a teenager wearing dusty cowboy boots, blue jeans with no holes, and a ball cap can order breakfast to go by speaking to a person instead of a box with a voice. He’ll also get a friendly “Howdy” from the old-timers. A breakfast taco, consisting of freshly cooked eggs, hash browns, bacon or sausage, cheese, and jalapenos, if you dare, is the café’s fast food. Wrapped in foil, it stays hot, and a small cup of coffee is served in a big cup, so you won’t spill on the two track roads.

Sabinal Canyon Museum 2023

 Sabinal Canyon Museum

‘’While I was there, three different people pointed to a mannequin wearing a long black dress and said, “That was my great-great (The number of “greats” varied) grandma’s.” The waist was narrower than my thigh.’’

Tucked in one corner was a veteran’s display that cinched my heart. The WWII wool uniform jacket would probably fit a ten-year-old in today’s world. A list of Utopia’s heroes, printed on red, white, and blue star-spangled paper, hung on the wall. This tiny town sent their sons, husbands, and fathers to fight for their country. I read each name with a silent thank you.

I spent three hours in the three-room museum surrounded by the history of this heartland town. It was one of the best days. My friend, Linda Weber, was launching her book, Finding Utopia, there to celebrate thirty years of work on her fictionalized family story that rocked this town in the 1920s. Linda’s grandmother had been murdered at the age of 23 while her five children, including Linda’s father, witnessed their mother’s shotgun death. The town caught the bad guy, but only after he’d burned down the school. Linda’s launch stirred the locals into action because she, I, and bestselling author Amanda Skenandore were donating our book sale profits to their Veteran’s Memorial, slatted for installation on the 4th of July.

Lost Maples Cafe, owned and operated by Rusty and Tacy Redden.

There is a garage, pub, post office, general store, museum, lodge, a “Huntin’ Stuff” store, and the Lost Maples Café, the community’s beating heart. The café opens at 7:00 A.M. for the local folks who order plates of biscuits and gravy and turn in unison when someone new walks in. 

The town folk preserved its oldest structure, built in 1873. They take pride in sharing their history with the Sabinal County Museum, well worth a stop after biscuits and gravy at the Lost Maples Cafe. Their artifacts, donated by original settlers’ families, celebrate their past instead of canceling it. A telegraph key connected them to their neighboring towns.

Lost Maples Cafe Utopia Texas

The Rock House. Still standing 150 years after it was built.

Rock House Utopia Texas

Catering by Toni Cantu of Postal Brews in Utopia

The town turned out in their Sunday best—indigo blue jeans, tooled leather suspenders, floral print blouses, and hats. Some younger folks joined us too. A reporter from the Hondo Anvil Herald came. She was 76 and told me, “I see all the shootings, accidents, and events in these here parts.” She was also on the Hondo library board, with a special section for veterans. I gave her a book for the library, and she invited me to her town.

Successful Book launch at the Sabinal Museum

Linda prepared well. The local pub catered sandwiches and trays of pickin’s. Linda hauled wine from the Utopia winery in Oregon. She had t-shirts, book bags, candles, and Utopia pancake syrup for sale, so no one would go home empty-handed if they didn’t want books. She also held a raffle for a gift basket of all things Utopian. In true small-town fashion, Reta won and heard the news before Linda did.

Linda Weber Book signing event with food

Linda, Amanda, and I thought we were prepared. We had our Squares, cell phones, computers, books, and swag. But there was no Wi-Fi, and the cell service was iffy. The locals knew better. They came with cash and checkbooks. They opened their wallets and shared stories about their ancestors, country, and just living. Their pride and warmth were as big as the great state of Texas. One charming, well-dressed lady gladly took our empty cardboard boxes to layer in her caliche soil to amend it Utopia style.

I sold out. Amanda almost did. Linda sold cases. The Veteran’s Memorial Committee triumphed. They needed a grand to finish the memorial. We brought in more, thanks to the generosity of many. Nobody expected that…nobody. The amount we raised was cause for another celebration—with the leftovers.

The few hours I spent in a room full of generous and gracious people will stay with me forever. I had a taste of utopia in Utopia. And fell in love with the Texas hill country, a place where the roads hug the contours of the land instead of scarring it, and sandstone road cuts tell their stories in chapters of strata. It’s where you can drive the straight and narrow for miles while your tires sing to keep you company. And you can stop in the middle of the road because the only moving thing is a scissor-tail flycatcher swooping up a meal. The air is heavy with moisture, and the mesquite so dense and uniform that it looks trimmed. The clouds, the sounds, the landscape is primal and paramount. And the gates of ranches resemble the Alamo on the way to Utopia.

On the road to Utopia in the Texas Hill Country.

The road to Utopia TX

Like the lone Crested Caracara whose golden face blazed among a flock of Black vultures, Utopia shines behind its resolute exterior, blinking with fireflies along the crystal clear Sabinal waters where the turtles and minnows dwell.

And the languid and lovely Sabinal River.

Glowing Review

Finding Utopia swept me away right from the start. Its endearing characters and richly drawn setting come together in a story that is both heartwarming and haunting. Drawing on her own family’s history, Linda Weber weaves a tale of love and sorrow, of dreams cut short and dreams that endure. One of those rare books that stay with you long after the end, Finding Utopia is a remarkable debut!

AMAZON BESTSELLING AUTHOR, Amanda Skenandore

Stay Informed