If Roger Welsch didn\u27t exist, a writer would invent him. He became known for a single action incomprehensible to the city-bred majority of folks: leaving a comfortable professor\u27s life in a Nebraska city for a farm on the arid central plains. Instead of disappearing into obscurity while academics mused on his self-destruction, he became famous writing about country ways. Still, he\u27s sometimes seen as a mere record-keeper for a simpler way of life that is disappearing into the busy blandness of American society
Woody Guthrie, House of Earth: A Novel, edited and introduced by Douglas Brinkley and Johnny Depp. N...
Twenty years ago, Stange and her husband traded a modest New Jersey house for seven square miles of ...
Rewilding the West gives a first impression of being the story of an innovative conservation project...
If Roger Welsch didn\u27t exist, a writer would invent him. He became known for a single action inco...
These recent books by longtime Nebraska author, folklorist, and humorist Roger Welsch examine life i...
In his introduction, Peter Miller declares of the Great Plains: This is a metaphysical land. By th...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
Review of: "The Big Empty: The Great Plains in the Twentieth Century," by R. Douglas Hurt
Review of: "Not Just Any Land: A Personal and Literary Journey into the American Grasslands," by Joh...
After the West Was Won is about pioneering in western South Dakota on land unsettled by agricultural...
Plains Folk is a compilation of ninety-six human- interest essays written for a syndicated column pu...
Steven R. Kinsella\u27s work is an uneasy admixture. On the one hand it is fresh, because it goes to...
When do the prairies begin in history? And are they now in danger of ending? Jenny Kerber notes that...
The Big Empty: The Great Plains in the Twentieth Century endeavors to synthesize a history that is a...
On the Web site of a major bookseller, a customer reviewer claims that A. B. Guthrie Jr.\u27s 1947...
Woody Guthrie, House of Earth: A Novel, edited and introduced by Douglas Brinkley and Johnny Depp. N...
Twenty years ago, Stange and her husband traded a modest New Jersey house for seven square miles of ...
Rewilding the West gives a first impression of being the story of an innovative conservation project...
If Roger Welsch didn\u27t exist, a writer would invent him. He became known for a single action inco...
These recent books by longtime Nebraska author, folklorist, and humorist Roger Welsch examine life i...
In his introduction, Peter Miller declares of the Great Plains: This is a metaphysical land. By th...
Michael Forsberg’s magnificent photos of land, animals, and people compelled me initially to turn pa...
Review of: "The Big Empty: The Great Plains in the Twentieth Century," by R. Douglas Hurt
Review of: "Not Just Any Land: A Personal and Literary Journey into the American Grasslands," by Joh...
After the West Was Won is about pioneering in western South Dakota on land unsettled by agricultural...
Plains Folk is a compilation of ninety-six human- interest essays written for a syndicated column pu...
Steven R. Kinsella\u27s work is an uneasy admixture. On the one hand it is fresh, because it goes to...
When do the prairies begin in history? And are they now in danger of ending? Jenny Kerber notes that...
The Big Empty: The Great Plains in the Twentieth Century endeavors to synthesize a history that is a...
On the Web site of a major bookseller, a customer reviewer claims that A. B. Guthrie Jr.\u27s 1947...
Woody Guthrie, House of Earth: A Novel, edited and introduced by Douglas Brinkley and Johnny Depp. N...
Twenty years ago, Stange and her husband traded a modest New Jersey house for seven square miles of ...
Rewilding the West gives a first impression of being the story of an innovative conservation project...