• Carson Now on Facebook
  • Follow Carson Now on Twitter
  • Follow Carson Now by RSS
  • Follow Carson Now by Email

Nevada Humanities publishes new Humanities Guide to Outdoor Nevada

Nevada Humanities is pleased to announce the publication of Sagebrush to Sandstone: A Humanities Guide to Outdoor Nevada, a 100-page nature guide published by Nevada Humanities and designed by Black Rock Press, including special front and back covers letterpress printed by Black Rock Press.

Part nature guide, part poetry book, and part workbook, Sagebrush to Sandstone: A Humanities Guide to Outdoor Nevada includes poems by writers from around the state paired with illustrations depicting Nevada’s natural beauty. The guide contains a foreword by Nevada Humanities executive director, Christina Barr, as well as an introduction by Debra Harry, an associate professor in the Department of Gender, Race, and Identity at the University of Nevada, Reno, and a member of the Nevada Humanities Board of Trustees.

The guide, which is edited by Kathleen Kuo and Scott Dickensheets, also includes creative prompts accompanied by scientific text to inspire more active and reflective engagement with the natural world. Sagebrush to Sandstone: A Humanities Guide to Outdoor Nevada is part of Nevada Reads, which is a statewide reading program of Nevada Humanities. Designed to complement the Nevada Reads 2021 theme of “Cultivating Environmental Literacy,” the guide is intended to move people outdoors as they explore the world around them and find new connections between the sciences and humanities.

Sagebrush to Sandstone: A Humanities Guide to Outdoor Nevada is available in limited edition print copies while supplies last and to everyone online as a free downloadable digital copy at the Nevada Humanities website at: nevadahumanities.org/sagebrush-to-sandstone.

“The value of the humanities is that it moves us to share the human experience, bringing us closer together,” says Christina Barr, executive director of Nevada Humanities. “We are proud that Sagebrush to Sandstone embodies this ethos of connectivity, where the voices of Nevada thinkers, poets, artists, and scientists combine to foster a deeper understanding of our natural world. Our new publication is intended to be the beginning of many journeys, and we cannot wait to see where the guide takes us all as we explore Nevada’s open spaces.”

“The great thing about Sagebrush to Sandstone is that it brings together two of Nevada’s most vital resources—nature and literature,” said Scott Dickensheets who co-edited Sagebrush to Sandstone. “Many residents might not realize how richly endowed the state is in both, and how long, varied, and fruitful the interplay between them has been. Hopefully this workbook will prompt them to explore each more deeply. That’s exactly the effect it had on me.”

Contributions from the following Nevada poets are included in this publication: Michelle Aucoin Wait, Jennifer Battisti, Gayle Brandeis, Angela M. Brommel, Echo Clark, Elaine Dallman, Shaun T. Griffin, Karen Laing, Heather Lang-Cassera, Rodney J. Lee, Stephen Shu-Ning Liu, Adrian C. Louis, Joanne Mallari, Waddie Mitchell, nila northSun, Gailmarie Pahmeier, Melanie Perish, Elizabeth Quiñones-Zaldaña, Kirk Robertson, Drew Seevers, Gary Short, and Charlene Stegman Moskal.

The following visual artists, who were inspired by Nevada, contributed to this publication: Pat Hansen, Jack Malotte, Tiffany Pereira, and Sharon K. Schafer. Additionally, scientists and scholars contributed notes and prompts. They include: Kevin Burls, Kelsey Fitzgerald, Matt Forister, Benjamin Hatchett, Steve Hromada, JD Lancaster, Elizabeth Leger, Morgan Long, Tatianna Menocal, Danielle Miles, Cynthia Scholl, Kacie N. Shourd, Devon Snyder, Katherine Strain, Benjamin Sonnenberg, Henry Sun, and Alexandra Urza.

Visit nevadahumanities.org for more information about this publication, Nevada Reads, and future Nevada Reads programming inspired by Sagebrush to Sandstone.

Publication of Sagebrush to Sandstone: A Humanities Guide to Outdoor Nevada was made possible with help from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Nevada Center for the Book, City of Reno Arts and Culture Commission, the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young University, and the John Ben Snow Memorial Trust.

Nevada Reads is a program of Nevada Humanities and is made possible with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young University, City of Reno Arts and Culture Commission, and the John Ben Snow Memorial Trust.

Nevada Humanities is one of 56 independent, nonprofit state and territorial humanities councils affiliated with the National Endowment for the Humanities. With offices in Reno and Las Vegas, Nevada Humanities creates public programs and supports public projects statewide that define the Nevada experience and facilitate the exploration of issues that matter to the people of Nevada and their communities. For more information about Nevada Humanities visit nevadahumanities.org. To learn more about Nevada Humanities and Nevada Center for the Book, visit nevadahumanities.org.

Top Stories

... or see all stories

The Carson City School Board meeting will take place on Tuesday, Feb. 27 beginning at 6:30 p.m. inside the Bob Crowell Board Room at the Community Center.

Roughly 30 Carson City residents met at Ronald D. Wilson Memorial Park at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 24 to counter the building of the dog park in this neighborhood.

The gathering lasted for roughly an hour and many concerns about the dog park and the area were voiced.

Attention musicians! The Carson City Symphony, conducted by Music Director David Bugli and Assistant Conductor Brian Fox, will begin rehearsals for their April 28 concert on Wednesday, Feb. 28, from 6:20 to 8:30 p.m., at the Carson High School band/orchestra room, 1111 N. Saliman Road in Carson City.

Are you are looking for a unique looking kitty with a great personality? Please come to Catmandu this weekend to meet Sky.

The Bureau of Land Management and the Nevada Department of Corrections, Silver State Industries have announced a saddle-started wild horse and burro adoption event at the Northern Nevada Correctional Center in Carson City on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024.

There is currently a need for hospice volunteers in the Carson City area as well as Minden and Gardnerville in Douglas County.

Lucas Wold is an exceptional student, and CHS is honored to highlight him as this week’s Carson High School Senior in the Spotlight.

On Friday, Feb. 24, 2023, a medical transport plane went down near Stagecoach, Nev., and all five lives on board were lost. This Saturday marks the one-year anniversary of this tragedy. In commemoration, Care Flight will suspend services for 24 hours and take time privately to honor the lives of the five individuals.

The Carson City Treasurer’s Office is reminding property owners that the fourth and final installment for the payment of real property taxes in Nevada for the current tax year — July 1, 2023 to June 30, 2024 is due on or before Monday, March 4.

An 8-year-old Dayton child was flown Thursday afternoon by Care Flight after being attacked by the family dog, according to the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office.

The Western Nevada College Foundation scholarship application for the 2024-2025 academic year is now open.

Hanifin's Antiques store owner Michael Robbins presented Lisa Schutte with a check for $1,000 to help Carson Animal Services Initiative, also known as CASI, to help with animal spaying in Carson City.

Carson City Fire Department and sheriff's deputies were called Thursday afternoon to a vehicle crash involving a youth bicycle rider at East Washington near North Carson Street.

Toastmasters Club presents a special speaker event on the 27th of February>

Carson City Toastmasters International extends a warm invitation to its eagerly anticipated special guest speaker event on Feb. 27. We are honored to host Major General Cheryn Fasano, a distinguished individual with over 38 years of dedicated military service and the esteemed title of Distinguished Toastmaster in Texas.

Greater Nevada Credit Union recently cleared the path for a $50,000 grant to Rebuilding Together Northern Nevada, presenting a check to the organization at GNCU’s Eagle Station branch in Carson City.

Carson High debate wrapped up the regular competition season as Elko High School. This tournament saw 13 schools and 164 individual competitors. Fourteen members of the team advanced to final rounds in speech events.

A man was arrested Wednesday for suspicion of felony assault with a deadly weapon after allegedly chasing a woman in a church parking lot with a machete, according to a Carson City Sheriff's Office booking report.

Carson City School District employees and administrators participated in the Nevada Association for Positive Behavior Support annual conference at the University of Nevada, Reno, Feb. 12, 2024.

Nevada Humane Society's Pet of the Week is Grey, a 1.5-year-old shepherd mix who came to us as a stray almost two weeks ago.

The Carson City Sheriff’s Office is asking for information to identify the person or persons and vehicle involved in the theft of construction materials.

Calling all couples needing skills and tools to increase communication, decrease conflict, set healthy boundaries and deepen intimacy.

A Carson Middle School teacher, who has been accused of slapping a student in the back of the head, will return to school Thursday.

My father lives in the San Francisco Bay Area and has been in the same home for 50 years. He is 86 now and shouldn't be living at home alone but he does not want to move.

Carson City School District will host a Career Fair at the district office, 1402 West King Street, Thursday, Feb. 22, from 12-2 p.m. Positions are open immediately and include entry level, part-time and full-time.

The capital city community is welcome to attend the feature-length documentary, "A City in Crisis," on March 2 at St. Peters Episcopal Church in Carson City. The documentary focuses on how the Reno-area has grappled with growth, housing and homelessness over the past two decades.

Were it not for some surprisingly fruitful results that I have observed recently, I would consider online dating to be a laughable endeavor. No, it wasn’t that long ago that Mark Twain gave us Adam’s account of noticing Eve:

As one of the largest St. Patrick’s Day celebrations in the west, Virginia City’s 33rd annual Rocky Mountain Oyster Fry makes its triumphant return Saturday, March 16 from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.

Wednesday, Feb. 21, will be a Minimum / Early Release Day for all schools in the Carson City School District. Educators utilize this time for professional learning while students have the remainder of the day off. If you normally pick up your child after school, please be there promptly at the below dismissal times.

Carson City, Carson Valley, and Virginia City have been selected by Travel Nevada to pursue a shared Cultural Corridor project that will help to build our regional tourism economy and support local arts, culture, history and heritage.

The Carson City Sheriff's Office is asking for the public's help identifying a suspect who stole a wallet and used the stolen credit cards to purchase items at multiple locations.