Posted inMarch 1, 2010: The War Next Door

Turnover at the top

“Attention, Home Depot shoppers! Aisle 12 has lumber ripped from the heart of old-growth forests!” California environmentalist Mike Brune got the idea to make shocking announcements like that during what he calls his “intercom campaign.” He and his operatives acquired the access code to Home Depot’s intercom systems — punch *80 — and pulled it […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Housing hullabaloo

UTAH We’re not sure if Utah can help Arizona with its biblical interpretation skills, but it’s got a great idea for those empty mega-homes. The Beehive State is faring better than Arizona financially, but it’s still feeling enough pain to have some vacant McMansions. Rather than leaving them all to the rats, however, at least […]

Posted inMay 18, 2009: The Rise of the Minotaur

Stewardship award for HCN

Stewardship award for HCNHigh Country News is this year’s recipient of the Jane Silverstein Ries Award. The award, presented annually since 1983 by the Colorado Chapter of the Association of Landscape Architects, honors “a person, group or organization that demonstrates a pioneering sense of awareness and stewardship of land-use values in the Rocky Mountain region.”  […]

Posted inFebruary 15, 2010: Prodigal Dogs

Fast and loose with facts

Ed Marston’s piece on Douglas Brinkley’s The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America can hardly be called a “review” (HCN, 1/18/10). Marston’s article simply rehearses — much more succinctly than Brinkley’s 900-plus pages — the life and political accomplishments of an amazing American leader. What Marston fails to do, is to evaluate […]

Posted inFebruary 15, 2010: Prodigal Dogs

Quicksilver questions

The subject of mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants and cement plants has always been fraught with uncertainties (HCN, 1/18/10). Industry influence at the congressional level often got transferred down as pressure on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Stephen Johnson, Bush’s administrator of the EPA, and his deputy, Marcus Peacock, seemed intent on reducing EPA’s […]

Posted inFebruary 15, 2010: Prodigal Dogs

The limits of memory

Half Broke Horses: A True-Life NovelJeannette Walls288 pages,hardcover: $26.Scribner, 2009. In some respects, Lily Casey Smith, the heroine of Jeannette Walls’ Half Broke Horses: A True-Life Novel, is a classic example of an independent, hardworking Western woman: a rancher, schoolteacher, businesswoman, wife and mother. Lily, however, is in the unique position of being both the […]

Posted inFebruary 15, 2010: Prodigal Dogs

A dark and disjointed journey

Day out of DaysSam Shepard304 pages, hardcover: $24.95.Alfred A. Knopf, 2009. The short stories in Day out of Days, Sam Shepard’s new collection, have an unhinged, out-there appeal, reflecting their eclectic, mostly Western settings. Some individual stories are even named after their locations: “Williams, Arizona,” for one, and “Cracker Barrel Men’s Room (Highway 90 West).” […]

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