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    Calendar Closeup

    Your weekly guide to Houston: Five (plus) don't-miss events

    Joel Luks
    Jan 3, 2014 | 6:00 am

    Pencil in having more fun, getting the most out of life and enjoying Houston's full array of affairs in your bucket list of things to do in 2014. The city is teeming with everything from traditional concerts to wild fetes, and it's my job to boss you around and tell you what to do, what to see and where to be. You're welcome.

    Off we go!

    Film screening: Cutie and the Boxer

    If you weren't at the opening of last year's Houston Cinema Arts Festival, you missed the opportunity to meet two charmingly candid artists who opened their hearts so that Houston filmmaker Zachary Heinzerling could tell their story, a tale of devout love and companionship despite typical life struggles in anything but a typical existence.

    I am convinced that you will be captivated by the strength of Noriko Shinohara, whose career was mostly overshadowed by her capricious husband, the famed Ushio Shinohara, whose avant-garde art-making process includes using boxing gloves covered in paint as his main creative tools.

    The skinny: Friday through Sunday; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; general admission tickets are $9.

    Houston Symphony presents Mozart's Jupiter Symphony

    It doesn't take much to fall for Houston Symphony music director Andrés Orozco-Estrada, his energy and passion for sharing the experience of music-making taking center stage in his efforts to electrify the 100-year-old ensemble. The first performance of 2014 welcomes back the Colombian-born conductor for a concert of the classics plus a work that responds to such classics.

    Haydn and Mozart symphonies plus a piece by Russian composer Alfred Schnittke written in 1977 . . . yesterday meets today(ish). Wasn't one of your new year's resolutions to try new things?

    The skinny: Friday through Sunday; Jones Hall; tickets start at $25.

    Architecture Center Houston Walking Tour: Rice University

    How's your pledge to lead a more active life going so far? I thought so. Need a boost? Try this two-hour walking tour hosted by Architecture Center Houston that explores the environs of Rice University and the campus' architecture, public art and historical landmarks.

    If you enjoy your walk-and-learn outing, know that there's a different walking tour almost every Saturday morning. Why not make it a habit?

    The skinny: Saturday, 10 a.m.; meet on the front lawn of Lovett Hall; $10 general public.

    Public Poetry Winter Series 2014 Kickoff

    Public Poetry continues its series of readings with this gathering at Park Place Regional Library that launches the winter season. Among the presenting bards are author Anis Shivani, Texas Southern University journalism professor Michael Berryhill, singer/songwriter Dulcie "Digh" Veluthukaran and Chicano beat poet Christopher Carmona.

    The skinny: Saturday, 2 p.m.; Park Place Regional Library; free event.

    BooTown's presents The Curio Show

    BooTown has established itself as an essential part of the city's art scene, adding a touch of whimsical and wacky inventiveness to Houston's cultural offerings. This next performance run, titled The Curio Show, finds inspiration in 16th century cabinets of curiosities, which were rooms that stored collections of interesting objects.

    Through puppets crafted by co-artistic director Lindsay Burleson, The Curio Show brings to life the hidden stories of these trinkets, such as jawbones, crystal balls, narwhal horns and jewelry. Support from creatives Peter Zama, Larkin Elliott and Emily Hynds and a live score performed by a local musician craft a performance in which the secret personalities of these objects are revealed.

    The skinny: Saturday through Jan. 18; Rudyard's British Pub and an empty storefront at 3603 Main St.; tickets are pay-what-you-can.

    The film Cutie and the Boxer tells a tale of devout love and companionship despite typical life struggles in anything but a typical existence.

    Cutie and the Boxer Ushio and Noriko Shinohara
    Cutie and the Boxer Facebook
    The film Cutie and the Boxer tells a tale of devout love and companionship despite typical life struggles in anything but a typical existence.
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    Remembering the Flood

    Texan wins Pulitzer Prize for heartbreaking story of Guadalupe flood

    Brianna Caleri
    May 5, 2026 | 2:00 pm
    Guadalupe River July 4 flood
    Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images
    Aaron Parsley has won a Pulitzer Prize for "Where the River Took Us," published days after the flood.

    Many Houstonians know someone who was impacted by the July 4, 2025 flood that killed more than 100 people. But one story cut through the chaos with an emotionally raw, first-person view of what actually happened. Texas Monthly senior editor Aaron Parsley published his survival story in "Where the River Took Us." On Monday, May 4, he has won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing.

    The prestigious journalism award has 23 winners each spring. For features, the judges chiefly consider "quality of writing, originality and concision."

    "Where the River Took Us," brought readers moment-by-moment from Parsley's family house on the Guadalupe River, to family members including Parsley rushing down the river itself, to reunification for most of the family and grief for his 20-month-old nephew, Clay, who drowned.

    Parlsey renders each scene with arresting detail, recalling dialog and individual pieces of refuse raging past in the water: branches, furniture, a car with headlights still on. Adding to the immersion were photographs by Jordan Vonderhaar and Parsley's family. Published just days after the flood, the account was one of the first deep looks at what happened for readers who had only seen general news coverage and disorganized posts on social media.

    “In a matter of hours, Aaron uncovered the singular experiences of family members wrenched from one another and thrown into a raging flood," said Texas Monthly editor in chief Ross McCammon in a story announcing the Pulitzer award. "He then braided those stories together to convey what a tragedy of this sort actually feels like. This is a deeply reported story of horror, courage, and love, and it is one of the finest magazine stories ever written.”

    “I am grateful to my family for trusting me and to everyone at Texas Monthly for offering their support, talent, and meticulous care during the process of writing, reporting, and all that goes into putting this story into the world,” said Parsley. “It means everything to me, and I’m deeply proud to be a part of the Texas Monthly team.”

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