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The essays in Gary Paul Nabhan’s Arab/American
celebrate the landscape, culture and cuisine of two great deserts:
The Middle Eastern lands from which his ancestors came and the
Sonoran Desert he now lives in.
by Evelyn Schlatter,
Apr 14, 2008
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In his book, The Devil’s Highway,
Luis Alberto Urrea tells the tragic story of a group of poor
immigrants who tried to get to a better life, and died in the
Arizona desert
by Ryan Slattery,
Aug 30, 2004
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When it comes to perfect starry nights, the West is always
the winner
by Terri Likens,
May 30, 2005
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In Organ Pipe: Life on the Edge, Carol
Ann Bassett pays homage to Organ Pipe National Monument and the
strange beauty of the desert
by Lee Allen,
Jun 13, 2005
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Botanist Sue Rutman has had surprising success just
yanking up buffelgrass, but herbicides remain the first line of
defense
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Aug 20, 2007
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At last -- a place to put utility scale plants that won't ruin the desert. But will politics and the economy get in the way?
by Judith Lewis Mernit,
Jun 04, 2012
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Illegal border crossers face a dangerous journey filled
with heat, dust, flies and thirst, and always the danger of capture
and deportation
by Michael Marizco,
May 15, 2006
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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Officer John Schaefer is
one of only two officers patrolling the 860,000 acres of Cabeza
Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, a thoroughfare for illegal
immigrants and armed drug smugglers
by Michael Marizco,
May 15, 2006
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It’s not easy to wean Westerners away from their
lush, traditional, turfgrass lawns, but with drought an increasing
fact of life, Xeriscape gardening is finally catching on
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Aug 21, 2006
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Charles Bowden’s book, Killing the Hidden Waters,
which explores the Sonoran Desert world of the Papago Indians, has
been re-released after 25 years
by Matt Jenkins,
Jun 07, 2004