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River Selby is a writer and former wildland firefighter. They hold an MFA in creative writing from Syracuse University; they are currently pursuing their Ph.D. Their writing has appeared in the New ...
Christine Ami is a Diné scholar, associate professor and weaver at Diné College, specializing in Indigenous animal studies, traditional ecological knowledge, cultural arts and epistemological ...
The black-and-white images on the supermarket walls create a nostalgic environment for people seeking groceries in the heart of a food desert.
BY MID-JULY 2002, the country was at a Preparedness Level 5, meaning that over 80% of the nation’s fire-fighting resources were committed. This was an extreme year for fires, with Oregon, Colorado and ...
Dana Levin’s latest book is Now Do You Know Where You Are (Copper Canyon Press), a NYT Notable Book. She serves as Distinguished Writer in Residence at Maryville University in Saint Louis.
Despite federal policies complicating Fullerton’s conservation success story.
American kestrels are found throughout the Americas, from Canada to Argentina’s southern tip. Come fall, kestrels from Canada and Alaska head south in search of food, returning north in the spring to ...
Nathaniel Perales is a Mexican American photographer based in Portland, Oregon, whose work explores the relationship between people and the land. He travels frequently in search of stories that ...
As public media is threatened after cuts from Trump administration, Indigenous radio also face threats to how they preserve and grow language.
By painting their final meal before execution, an artist humanized people sentenced to capital punishment.
In late spring, the San Juan charged like a desert bighorn ram in the rut. It was strewn with cottonwood seeds: The puffy globs drifted on the khaki surface like a monsoon over a desert escarpment.
A former firefighter makes the case for community paramedicine in the age of climate change.