High Country News Brief review of reg saner's The FourCornered Falcon Essays on the Interior West and the Natural Scene. http://www.hcn.org/1995/aug07/dir/BB2714.html
University Of Utah Press - History Reaching Keet Seel Ruins Echo and the Anasazi reg saner For the better part oftwo decades, writer reg saner has been returning to the Southwest to explore http://www.upress.utah.edu/Subject/literature.html
The Georgia Review An excerpt from Desert River, Different River by reg saner. http://www.uga.edu/~garev/spring99/saner.htm
Extractions: STAFF PAST ISSUES LINKS MERCHANDISE ... OTHER an excerpt from Desert River, Different River by Reg Saner Desert air, being invisible, doesn't keep anything from you. "Go ahead," it says. "See as much as you care toand then some." A world of colored rock, a merciless clarity. Mercy, after all, stone knows nothing of; for that we have each other, or nothingwhich is why our long, difficult climb to the head of Water Canyon and beyond led Nick and me to the trip's high point in more ways than one. Such words may sound philosophical. Yet that plateau of naked rock overlooking the Coloradonow confluent with the Greenmade them real as water and shade. The latter was in short supply. What little we found was cast by one of those erosional pillars called hoodoos, whose noon shadow left our legs and feet fully sunlit. As it was, in response to earth's rotation we had to budge every now and then just to keep our heads and torsos shaded by the skimpy umbrella of its capstone. But we could see all right. Looking out across geological time, we could see the real forever. Nothing philosophical about it. Space too. Hyperclear miles of rock: blond, rust, umber, ocher, sienna, or red, even purpleall getting drilled by electromagnetic radiation called sunlight. Not a cloud. A jet plane soundlessly high left not one wisp of vapor. To any plant wishing for rain, the sky was hopelessly blue. Way east lay that vast panorama's sole grace note: a few pitiful flecks of snow veining couloirs on summits of the Manti-la Sal mountains.
Extractions: unsere Produktdatenbank wird derzeit aktualisiert. Daher können wir Ihnen im Augenblick nicht das von Ihnen gesuchte Original-Produkt anzeigen, sondern stellen Ihnen interessante Auktionen zu Ihrem Suchbegriff vor. Melden Sie sich jetzt bei Ebay an und bieten Sie für diese interessanten Produkte mit. Ihr Alphamusic-Team Leider keine Treffer gefunden. Ausschlussklausel
Extractions: by Reg Saner From the February 2003 Summer evening, July 3, 1957. Opening night at the Santa Fe Operas very first production. And for its premier event the company has chosen Puccinis Madam Butterfly. Outdoor theater is all very well, but among audience members, sunsets afterglow to the northwest complicates the experience, as do lights twinkling 30 miles away along the Pajarito Plateau. Meanwhile, on stage, the plaintive Cho-cho san longs for a first glimpse of Pinkertons returning ship, and sings her hopeful aria, Un bel dì : One lovely day well spy a thread of smoke rising at the farthest edge of the sea. How many spectators realize that those lights twinkling in the distance are the lights of Los Alamos? In the same instant, how many also recall that Cho-cho sans love story takes place in Nagasaki? How is it that a set of black marks on paper move us deeply enough for electrodes struck on the skull and torso to probably pick up phisiological effects?
AWP: The Writer's Chronicle: October/November 2002 reg saner Because my mind is more preSocratic than postmodern, what Im aboutto say, you already know; namely, that a frequent effect of poetic images is http://www.awpwriter.org/magazine/articles.htm
Extractions: Title: Reaching Keet Seel: Ruin's Echo and the Anasazi Author: Saner, Reg... Topic: Main Catalog Places United States New Mexico Kind: Trade paperback. More Product Information (may be slow) Condition: Used - Very Good - Library discard with usual markings, but very lightly used. 1998 trade paperback, as shown. Price: Shipping: Within USA: $3.49 (4th class mail - 1-2 weeks) $5.49 (Priority Mail - 2-4 days) Outside USA: $9.79 (Using Global Priority airmail when possible - about 1 week.) Item#: First choose shipping method: USA 4th Class Mail ($3.49) USA Priority Mail ($5.49) Non-USA airmail ($9.79) Or... Order from us directly by phone at - Visa, MC, Discover accepted We also accept checks and money orders sent by mail, as long as you email us first so we can hold the item for you. We will reply with the total amount and the address to use. Please email us if you have any questions or need to know more about this item. Main Catalog Places United States New Mexico Search our catalog for
Book Catalog: New Mexico Lightly used. Reaching Keet Seel Ruin's Echo and the Anasazi by saner,reg $7.95 Item 1592m11 - trade paperback Condition http://www.aliensonearth.com/catalog/topic/Places/United_States/New_Mexico/
Extractions: Search Our Catalog for Location: Book Catalog Topics Places United States > Here Aliens on Earth Bookstore United States: New Mexico History Los Alamos Listed Below: 19 in-stock items Sorted by: lowest price title author oldest entry ... Enemy Ancestors: The Anasazi World, With a Guide to Sites by Matlock, Gary...
Extractions: The open spaces of the American Southwest and the hidden crevices of the human heart form the backdrop for this profound collection of essays on the wilderness spirit. From a ridge high in the Colorado Rockies, to a pine forest in southern Utah, to hiking rails in Arizona's Navajo country to ancient Anasazi sites in New Mexico, Saner guides his readers on journeys through soaring landscapes and inner topography. "[Saner's] sensitivity is in the service of the great ethical and practical issues of our lifetime. The beauty of this book is... in its plain sense of responsibility." Ursula K. Le Guin, New York Times Book Review
CAP: Conservation And Preservation F Back to top. The FourCornered Falcon Essays on the Interior Westand the Natural Scene saner, reg. The Friendship of Nature A http://www.americanplaces.org/books/subjects/conservation_preservation.shtml
The Georgia Review an excerpt from. Mesa Walk. by reg saner. WHA' happened? Comic strip charactersused to say that after having been whapped on the head or knocked for a loop. http://www.uga.edu/garev/summer01/saner.htm
Extractions: STAFF PAST ISSUES LINKS MERCHANDISE ... OTHER an excerpt from Mesa Walk by Reg Saner "WHA' happened?" Comic strip characters used to say that after having been whapped on the head or knocked for a loop. In Blondie, the ever-late-to-work Dagwood Bumstead would dash headlong out the front door and invariably run smack into the mailman. From my funny-paper days, belly down on our living room rug, head propped in hands while scanning Popeye or Flash Gordon or Terry and the Pirates, the only variant on "wha' happened?" that I recall was, "where am I?" My personal questions, lifelong. Throughout history, approaches to "wha' happened?" and "where am I?" and "why?" have been fenced off in a thousand-and-one different ways as sacred precincts by the world's thousand-and-one religions. Equally well known is the fact that some orthodoxies have taken unamiable, not to say murderous, views of people who dare pursue their own answerson pain of being set afire or torn into small pieces. Trite as citing Galileo's trial may seem, his condemnation illustrates exemplarily well the reciprocity between context and content, and therefore marks the Great Divide between thought control and science. With intuitive accuracy, the Church sensed that a widened knowledge of where we are would change what we are, in ways making its dogmas problematic. And how.
The Georgia Review an excerpt from. Desert River, Different River. by reg saner. Desert air,being invisible, doesn't keep anything from you. Go ahead, it says. http://www.uga.edu/garev/spring99/saner.htm
Extractions: STAFF PAST ISSUES LINKS MERCHANDISE ... OTHER an excerpt from Desert River, Different River by Reg Saner Desert air, being invisible, doesn't keep anything from you. "Go ahead," it says. "See as much as you care toand then some." A world of colored rock, a merciless clarity. Mercy, after all, stone knows nothing of; for that we have each other, or nothingwhich is why our long, difficult climb to the head of Water Canyon and beyond led Nick and me to the trip's high point in more ways than one. Such words may sound philosophical. Yet that plateau of naked rock overlooking the Coloradonow confluent with the Greenmade them real as water and shade. The latter was in short supply. What little we found was cast by one of those erosional pillars called hoodoos, whose noon shadow left our legs and feet fully sunlit. As it was, in response to earth's rotation we had to budge every now and then just to keep our heads and torsos shaded by the skimpy umbrella of its capstone. But we could see all right. Looking out across geological time, we could see the real forever. Nothing philosophical about it. Space too. Hyperclear miles of rock: blond, rust, umber, ocher, sienna, or red, even purpleall getting drilled by electromagnetic radiation called sunlight. Not a cloud. A jet plane soundlessly high left not one wisp of vapor. To any plant wishing for rain, the sky was hopelessly blue. Way east lay that vast panorama's sole grace note: a few pitiful flecks of snow veining couloirs on summits of the Manti-la Sal mountains.
Quarterly Review Of Literature Volume 28-9 Brief comment on poet saner's vision. Poem "Field Notes."Category Arts Literature Authors S saner, reg Return to the Backlist. reg saner. Red Letters. saner's visiontheword does not seem excessiveis shaped by his long, patient, humble http://www.princeton.edu/~qrl/vol28.htm
Extractions: Volume 28-9 VOLUMES XXVIII-XXIX celebrated the QRL's 45TH ANNIVERSARY: the winners received special $5000 awards. For reviews and information about the poets published in Volume 28-9, plus a sample of their work, click on their name below. Return to the Backlist Saner's visionthe word does not seem excessiveis shaped by his long, patient, humble meditations among the rocky fastnesses of Colorado. This vision comes to a penetrating, essential sense of that world. At the same time even as, paradoxically, the poems question itthey present a vivid portrait of the human presence. In the Babel that makes up modem poetry, Saner's lucid, resonantly quiet voice deserves all ears.
Side Canyon Browsing Reaching Keet Seel Ruin's Echo And The Side Canyon Directory, Product 137 of 179, Writers and Photographers Southwest West. Title Reaching Keet Seel Ruin's Echo and the Anasazi by reg saner http://sidecanyon.com/acb1/showdetl.cfm?&DID=111&Product_ID=1033
Side Canyon: Browsing Reaching Keet Seel: Ruin's Echo And The Anasazi Side Canyon Directory, Product 74 of 98, Rock Art, Ruins the Ancients. TitleReaching Keet Seel Ruin's Echo and the Anasazi by reg saner Your Price $13.45. http://sidecanyon.com/acb1/showdetl.cfm?DID=111&Product_ID=5737
Ron Steffens, Bio 1995. Rawlins, CL Skys Witness. 1993. saner, reg. The FourCorneredFalcon. 1993. Turner, Jack. The Abstract Wild. 1996. Stories. http://wolf.southwestern.cc.or.us/faculty/rsteffen/bio.htm
Www.asle.umn.edu/archive/biblios/rocky_mtns.txt Essays Cloud Crossing, which is set in the Pacific Northwest, and Mountain Music, from a recent issue of Orion. saner, reg. The FourCornered Falcon . http://www.asle.umn.edu/archive/biblios/rocky_mtns.txt
Extractions: Date: Tue, 20 May 1997 09:41:32 -0700 From: rdouglss@norte.sfsu.edu (Rebecca Douglass) To: asle@equinox.unr.edu Subject: Mountain Bookscompilation Mountain WritersParticularly Rocky Mountains. I've included people's comments and annotations and any other information we might find helpful. There are still a couple of questions out there about authors, etc., so people might want to fill us in if you know (like the author of ). Abbey, Edward. Stuff about Numa Ridge fire lookout. Austin, Mary. Various. Author unknown. . Includes some poetry and focuses on the Olympic Peninsula and Mountain Range in Washington. May or may not be available. Bird, Isabella. . Not strictly nature writing, but a good many passages would qualify. , by a woman named Chris Cza**** (can't recall the spelling). She built a house in the interior of B.C. and wrote about the experience. She has a new book just out as well (this isn't very helpful I realize). Maybe someone else knows her last name? Campbell, SueEllen. , U of Arizona. Includes some natural history/excursion essays on the area. Carrigher, Sally.
Cedar Mesa Bibliography Author Index Alfonso; Petersen, David; Pike, Donald G. Plog, Fred; Roberts, David;Rusho, WL; Rusho, WL; Rusho, WL; saner, reg; Schaafsma, Polly; Schaafsma http://bcn.boulder.co.us/environment/cacv/cacvbidx.htm
General Bibliography For The Cedar Mesa Area ISBN 0965664511 Author saner, reg 1998; Reaching Keet Seel; Ruin's Echo and theAnasazi; University of Utah Press ISBN 0874805538 Author Schaafsma, Polly http://bcn.boulder.co.us/environment/cacv/cacvblst.htm
Extractions: Extended Bibliography for the Cedar Mesa Area Return to The Cedar Mesa Project Home Page. Here are references to a wide variety of books and publications about the Anasazi and Native Americans in general. Also see the Book Reviews page for comments about some selected books. Titles are ordered by author. Citations are presented in the following format: Author: Abbey, Edward 1991; Desert Solitaire; Ballantine Books; New York ISBN: 0345326490 A meditation on the red-rock West. Author: Abbey, Edward 1977; The Journey Home; E. P. Dutton; New York Title is out of print Author: Atkins, Victoria M., ed. 1993; Anasazi Basketmasker.; Bureau of Land Management Papers from the 1990 Wetherill-Grand Gulch Symposium Author: Ayer, Eleanor H. 1993; The Anasazi; Walker Author: Baars, Don 1989; Canyonlands Country; Canon Publishers Ltd.; Kansas ISBN: 0961959122 Geology of the Canyonlands Country. Author: Barnes, F. A. 1987; Canyon Country Arches and Bridges; Canyon Country Publications ISBN: 0961458615 Author: Barnes, F. A.