Posted inGoat

The sad tale of Shiprock South

Residents of northwestern New Mexico may by now be numbed by the almost surreal, ongoing saga of the busted housing development in Shiprock. But to those unfamiliar with the tale, it’s downright heartbreaking. “Navajo housing project could waste millions,” reads the headline in the Farmington Daily Times, and “be forever incomplete.” The story opens: SHIPROCK […]

Posted inFebruary 18, 2013: Farming on the Fringe

A Montanan walks into a Cairo bar: A review of Evel Knievel Days

Evel Knievel DaysPauls Toutonghi293 pages,hardcover: $24.Crown, 2012. Khosi Saqr Clark, the narrator of Pauls Toutonghi’s funny and winsome second novel, Evel Knievel Days, isn’t a typical native of Butte. Sure, he loves Montana and enjoys the annual Evel Knievel Days spectacle, complete with its “American Motordome Wall of Death,” but his neurotic nature (“the obsessive-compulsive’s […]

Posted inFebruary 18, 2013: Farming on the Fringe

Book review: Quilts: California Bound, California Made 1840-1940

Quilts: California Bound, California Made 1840-1940. Sandi Fox 208 pages, softcover: $40. University of Oklahoma Press, 2013. Quilts are cherished both for their warmth and for the memories they hold, so it makes sense that they were among the sparse belongings early immigrants brought with them by horse, wagon, ship or train to California. In […]

Posted inFebruary 18, 2013: Farming on the Fringe

Reading the Brautigan Bible: A review of Jubilee Hitchhiker: The Life and Times of Richard Brautigan

Jubilee Hitchhiker: The Life and Times of Richard BrautiganWilliam Hjortsberg896 pages,hardcover: $38.Counterpoint Press, 2012. Richard Brautigan grew up in Oregon, convinced he’d be an influential writer. He rose to fame in San Francisco and later split his time between Bolinas, Calif., Livingston, Mont. and Japan. He published 10 poetry books and a dozen novels, including […]

Posted inGoat

Where the wealth is

If you live in, say, Boulder, Napa or San Jose, and you feel like your neighbors are wealthier than you are, it’s probably not paranoia. They really do have more money than you. That’s the takeaway from the map of the week, released Feb. 11 by the U.S. Census Bureau, that shows which counties have […]

Posted inRange

Rants from the Hill: Chicken pastorale

“Rants from the Hill” are Michael Branch’s monthly musings on life in the high country of Nevada’s western Great Basin desert, published the first Monday of each month. American folk musician and hillbilly existentialist Greg Brown offers some mid-song patter referring to Pablo Neruda’s wonderful poem “On Weariness” (“Cierto Cansancio”), in which Neruda memorably wrote […]

Posted inFebruary 4, 2013: Making Good on the Badlands

A review of An Atlas of Historic New Mexico Maps

An Atlas of Historic New Mexico Maps 1550-1941. Peter L. Eidenbach, 184 pages, hardcover: $45. University of New Mexico Press, 2012. In this colorful collection of maps, archaeologist and historian Peter L. Eidenbach presents the Land of Enchantment as seen by early conquerors, naturalists, surveyors, and railroaders. Geologically speaking, New Mexico has been mostly static […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Art finds a place alongside science at New Mexico research station

Everywhere, cardboard was scattered across metal counters and test tube racks. Natasha Ribeiro, an exuberant photographer with a blonde pixie cut, displayed one of the finished products: a box with a tiny hole and a slot for photographic paper, sealed with black tape. “A pinhole camera!” she exclaimed. “There are enough supplies for everyone to […]

Posted inWotr

Letting go of the comfortable

In central Washington’s Douglas County you can find ghost houses worn by wind and marooned on small islands of untilled dirt. Their inhabitants once gazed out at the easternmost Cascade Mountains, their peaks just above eye level from the county’s 3,000-foot high plain. My mother’s family lived in one of those houses surrounded by wheat […]

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