Posted inNovember 12, 2012: Nowhere to run

The violent story of our first national park: A review of Empire of Shadows

Empire of Shadows: the Epic Story of YellowstoneGeorge Black548 pages, hardcover: $35. St. Martin’s Press, 2012. Whenever my country’s absurd politics wear me out, I remind myself that we were the first nation to have a true national park: Yellowstone. Sometimes, I’ll even drive the four hours or so south from my home to the […]

Posted inOctober 15, 2012: Are you a local?

The true believer and the skeptic: A review of River Republic and A Ditch in Time

Two optimistic new books exhort Americans to embrace the challenges of their aging water infrastructure, but they provide sharply opposing views. In River Republic: The Fall and Rise of America’s Rivers, political scientist Daniel McCool calls on citizens to undo the damage done to the country’s waterways by the engineers of yore. In contrast, in […]

Posted inOctober 15, 2012: Are you a local?

Celebrating what remains: A review of The Dog Stars

Award-winning adventure writer Peter Heller sets his debut novel, The Dog Stars, in an apocalypse-stricken Colorado, where Hig, one of the planet’s few survivors, flies around in an antique plane with a dog as his copilot. To this compelling frame, Heller adds adrenaline-pumping adventure, deep philosophical undercurrents … and a bit of love. In the […]

Posted inOctober 15, 2012: Are you a local?

Suffering and freedom in a microcosm: A review of San Miguel

California writer T.C. Boyle’s 14th novel, San Miguel, continues his exploration of the Channel Islands, off the coast of Santa Barbara, Calif., which began with last year’s When The Killing’s Done. This time, Boyle focuses on windswept San Miguel Island and the histories of two very different families who inhabit it between 1888 and 1945. […]

Posted inOctober 15, 2012: Are you a local?

The wild without and within: A review of Wilderness

Wilderness pulls no punches. The novel’s descriptions are so visceral, the main character’s struggles so gut wrenching, that it demands an equally full-bodied response from its reader. Within the book’s pages are violence, yes, and death, sickness and guilt –– all the hard things. But the most powerfully moving moments are those in which dark […]

Posted inSeptember 17, 2012: Pallids in Purgatory

Home improvement: A review of Sugarhouse

Sugarhouse: Turning the Neighborhood Crack House into Our Home Sweet HomeMatthew Batt258 pages, softcover: $14.95Mariner, 2012. Matthew Batt is a perpetual student, earning his Ph.D. in English from the University of Utah while his wife, Jenae, works — until she finally gets tired of supporting his grad-school habit. “I got home from ‘class’ one night, […]

Posted inSeptember 3, 2012: Identity Politics, Montana Style

A parent lost and found: A review of Descanso for My Father: Fragments of a Life

Descanso for My Father: Fragments of a LifeBy Harrison Candelaria Fletcher147 pages, softcover: $14.95.University of Nebraska Press, 2012. When Colorado writer Harrison Candelaria Fletcher was almost 2 years old, his father, a pharmacist, died, leaving behind a wife and five children. His mother, who was 29 years younger than her husband, grew up in a […]

Posted inSeptember 3, 2012: Identity Politics, Montana Style

Book note: Valley of Shadows and Dreams

Valley of Shadows and Dreams Ken Light and Melanie Light, Foreword by Thomas Steinbeck 176 pages, hardcover: $40. Heyday Books, 2012. ‘Except for the perimeter, every single living thing had been placed where someone had planned it to be and placed it just so,’ writes Melanie Light, describing her first experience flying over California’s Central […]

Posted inSeptember 3, 2012: Identity Politics, Montana Style

Return to innocence: A review of Queen of America

Queen of AmericaLuis Alberto Urrea492 pages, softcover:$14.99.Little, Brown and Company, 2011.   It’s hard to be a saint, but being a saint’s father, husband or friend can’t be easy, either. ‘Not all crosses are made of wood,’ as Luis Alberto Urrea observes in his novel Queen of America. It’s a sequel to his 2005 book, […]

Posted inAugust 20, 2012: Troubled Taos

Atlas of Yellowstone

Atlas of YellowstoneW. Andrew Marcus, James E. Meacham, Ann W. Rodman and Alethea Y. Steingisser274 pages, hardcover: $65University of California Press, 2012. The Atlas of Yellowstone details the Greater Yellowstone Area from A to Z. It goes beyond the region’s iconic geysers, wildlife and vegetation, with charts and maps that cover subjects ranging from the […]

Posted inAugust 20, 2012: Troubled Taos

Lights, camera, life: A review of Beautiful Ruins

Beautiful RuinsJess Walter352 pages, hardcover: $25.99.Harper, 2012. Beautiful Ruins, Washington author Jess Walter’s dashing sixth novel, spans two continents and five decades, creating a panoramic view of the lives it encompasses. The paths of its nine main characters intersect in places as various as Italy, Hollywood, Seattle, and Sandpoint, Idaho, in the course of this […]

Posted inAugust 6, 2012: Of Birds and Men

Arapaho Journeys: Photographs and Stories from the Wind River Reservation

Arapaho Journeys: Photographs and Stories from the Wind River ReservationSara Wiles262 pages, hardcover: $35.University of Oklahoma Press, 2011. For more than 30 years, Sara Wiles has photographed life on Wyoming’s Wind River Reservation, a community she first encountered as a social worker in 1973. Wiles, who was adopted by Arapaho elder Frances C’Hair, is clearly […]

Posted inAugust 6, 2012: Of Birds and Men

Practical pyromania: A review of The Flamer

The FlamerBen Rogers257 pages, softcover: $14.Aqueous Books, 2012. Ben Rogers’ engaging first novel, The Flamer, is the coming-of-age story of a young Nevada pyromaniac named Oby Brooks. Oby discovers his love for conflagrations when his father donates the family’s dilapidated house to the Reno Fire Department to burn “for training purposes.” The boy watches the […]

Posted inAugust 6, 2012: Of Birds and Men

We cannot drill our way out of this mess: A review of Arctic Voices

Arctic Voices: Resistance at the Tipping Point Subhankar Banerjee, editor. 560 pages, hardcover: $35.95. Seven Stories Press, 2012. In 2001, on the U.S. Senate floor, one of Alaska’s pro-development politicians held up a blank white piece of posterboard. “This is a picture of ANWR (the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge) as it exists for about nine […]

Posted inJuly 23, 2012: The Hardest Climb

Hero worship: A review of Let the Birds Drink in Peace

Let the Birds Drink In PeaceRobert Garner McBrearty152 pages, softcover: $14.99.Conundrum Press, 2011. In Colorado writer Robert Garner McBrearty’s fresh and funny new story collection, Let the Birds Drink In Peace, a boy tells his mother he plans to do something great when he grows up. “Everybody feels like that when they’re young,” she replies. […]

Posted inJuly 23, 2012: The Hardest Climb

Once upon a time in a small town: A review of The Other Shoe

The Other ShoeMatt Pavelich320 pages, softcover: $16.95.Counterpoint, 2012. It’s a story as old as storytelling itself: A young man leaves his home in search of adventure before settling down to the responsibilities of adulthood. But in Matt Pavelich’s second novel, The Other Shoe, the story is less about the traveler and more about the aftermath […]

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