Los Angeles Times

On the road in Texas, where all the roads look like rivers

FORT BEND, Texas - It's hard to explain the stupefying vastness of the flooding in Texas, the nature of the calamity named Tropical Storm Harvey, until you actually try to drive somewhere in it.

The rain falls all kinds of ways: in buckets, sideways, in little spits, or just plain regular, but the one thing it absolutely doesn't ever do is stop. It rains in the morning, it rains

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times3 min read
Universal Studios Tram Tossed 'Multiple' Riders To The Ground, Accident Investigators Say
LOS ANGELES — A tram vehicle at Universal Studios Hollywood threw "multiple" riders to the ground after it struck a guardrail near props from the "Jurassic Park" film franchise in an accident that is under investigation by the California Highway Patr
Los Angeles Times4 min read
George Skelton: California's Budget Relies On The Richest Taxpayers, And We're Paying The Price
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Borrowing an old bromide, when the stock market sneezes, California's state government catches pneumonia. It's more than a common cold when the state coughs up billions of buckets in red ink. Wall Street recently has exhibited
Los Angeles Times5 min read
Avian Flu Outbreak Raises A Disturbing Question: Is Our Food System Built On Poop?
If it’s true that you are what you eat, then most beef-eating Americans consist of a smattering of poultry feathers, urine, feces, wood chips and chicken saliva, among other food items. As epidemiologists scramble to figure out how dairy cows throug

Related Books & Audiobooks