Single Issue Archives - The New Territory Magazine https://newterritorymag.com/product-category/magazine/single-issue/ Lower Midwest slow journalism and literary magazine Sat, 10 Aug 2024 00:00:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://newterritorymag.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/cropped-nt_logomark2021_web-32x32.png Single Issue Archives - The New Territory Magazine https://newterritorymag.com/product-category/magazine/single-issue/ 32 32 Issue 15: Fading Echoes https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-15-fading-echoes/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-15-fading-echoes Tue, 05 Mar 2024 15:11:37 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=10008 The New Territory Magazine is an independent print magazine dedicated to telling true stories of land, people, and possibilities in the Lower Midwest.

Issue 15 spotlights a love story's final chapter, active shooter preparations for long-term care facilities, poignant narrative of family, identity, and place, and so much more. Cover photo by Arin Yoon.

Each purchase directly supports the 30+ creators who contributed writing and art to this issue, plus the issues we're addressing as a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.

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The New Territory is an independent print magazine dedicated to telling new and true stories of land, people, and possibilities in the Lower Midwest.

Issue 15 spotlights a love story’s final chapter, active shooter preparations for long-term care facilities, an ecological mystery on the fens of Missouri, a poignant narrative of family, identity, and place, and so much more.

Printed and published in Jefferson City, Missouri, The New Territory Magazine, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, is dedicated to supporting quality work in every way. Each purchase goes directly toward supporting the 30+ creators who contributed writing and art to this issue.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 13: Search & Find https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-13-search-and-find/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-13-search-and-find Thu, 26 Jan 2023 19:17:50 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=8163 “Our land needs new stories. It needs stories no longer based in extraction, or conquering, or the lie of progress.” — “Of Plow Spires” by Leslie VonHolten.

In The New Territory magazine's lucky number 13 — themed "Search & Find" — you can expect to FIND a photographic lens into the economic disparities among cowboys – Black and white – across the Lower Midwest, as well as a Zen trip downriver in SEARCH of wild lotus seeds. You will find prairie ecologists seeking answers in their discipline-specific habitats. You’ll find a musical festival at a Kansas zoo. You will also find the word “aeolian” in the Eavesdropping section and perhaps need to search for your dictionary.

Details:

  • 128 pages, 7" x 10"
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri

All the funds from your purchase directly supports the contributors of The New Territory.

Psst…Subscriptions get free shipping.

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The New Territory magazine’s lucky number 13 – themed ‘Search & Find’ — is now at the printer. In Issue 13, you can expect to FIND a photographic lens into the economic disparities among cowboys – Black and white – across the Lower Midwest, as well as a Zen trip downriver in SEARCH of wild lotus seeds. You will find prairie ecologists seeking answers in their discipline-specific habitats. You’ll find a musical festival at a Kansas zoo. You will also find the word “aeolian” in the Eavesdropping section and perhaps need to search for your dictionary.

With features by Doug Barrett, Leslie VonHolten, Areca Roe, Marika Josephson and Molly M. Pearson.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 12: Flight https://newterritorymag.com/product/12/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=12 Tue, 21 Jun 2022 23:45:15 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=7523 “Like these hills and prairies, the winds will be here long after we are gone.” — “Reverse Manifest Destiny in the Loess Hills” by Lance Brisbois. Cover photo by Dave Seidensticker.

Vandalia, Missouri: John Gibson on when a small town loses its stalwart.

Izard County, Arkansas: Bears beyond borders.

Greenville, Illinois: Two siblings share how methamphetamine reshaped their southern Illinois town.

Plus more features, departments, literature by Laela Zaidi, Mathew Goldberg, Brett Salsbury, Robbie Q. Telfer and Jay Howard, and art by Angela Muller.

The New Territory gets intimate with the souls of the Lower Midwest. Your purchase directly supports the people who archive and interpret our region’s stories: from stories taking flight through their whole journey.

Psst…Subscriptions get free shipping.

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“Like these hills and prairies, the winds will be here long after we are gone.” — “Reverse Manifest Destiny in the Loess Hills” by Lance Brisbois. Cover photo by Dave Seidensticker.

+ John Gibson reflects on when the small town of Vandalia, Missouri, lost its stalwart.

+ From Izard County, Arkansas, Jonny Carroll Swain reports on black bears making a comeback.

+ Greenville, Illinois: two siblings share how methamphetamine reshaped their southern Illinois town.

+ Chelsey Hillyer peels back the layers of Chris Gaines, Garth Brooks, and the Midwestern psyche in “Lost in You”

Plus more a Q&A with two river heroes, the Light Room photo feature, reviews, and literature by Laela Zaidi, Mathew Goldberg, Brett Salsbury, Robbie Q. Telfer and Jay Howard, and art by Angela Muller.

The New Territory gets intimate with the souls of the Lower Midwest. Your purchase directly supports the people who archive and interpret our region’s stories: from stories taking flight through their whole journey.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 11: Emergence https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-11-emergence/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-11-emergence Sun, 17 Oct 2021 17:38:43 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=6599 “I climbed out of the grave and turned for the car. I have not been back.” — Patrick Mainelli, "Milkweed Elegy."

Lincoln, Nebraska: Midwest queer culture and the shuttering of storied gay bars. Yellville, Arkansas: Hidden treasure in Marion County. Lawrence, Kansas: Sunflowers, Oscar Wilde and finding home.

Those are just some of the 20-or-so stories from our big, beautiful, biannual magazine. Cover photo by Al Griffin.

The New Territory gets intimate with the souls of the Lower Midwest. Your purchase directly supports the people who archive and interpret our region’s stories: from emergence to the end of the story.

Psst...Subscriptions get free shipping.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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“I climbed out of the grave and turned for the car. I have not been back.” — Patrick Mainelli, “Milkweed Elegy.”

Features

+ The Treasure House of Yellville, Arkansas: A one-of-a-kind treasure box house was home to an Arkansas artist. Jordan P. Hickey. Arkansas.

+ In the Blink of a Lifetime: What Lincoln, Nebraska’s gay bars meant for one writer’s family, and what their shuttering means for the local community.  Molly M. Pearson. Nebraska.

+ What Ought to Be: Reimagining the legacy of Oscar Wilde – and oneself – in Lawrence, Kansas. Jackie Hedeman. Kansas.

+ Solar Midwest: Exploring the complications around solar energy policy in the sunflower state. Kansas.+ Milkweed Elegy: A long-forgotten cemetery offers hope of escape amid pandemic anxiety, but loneliness and unease follow close, dancing between the time-worn headstones. Patrick Mainelli. Nebraska.

Those are just some of the 20-or-so stories from our big, beautiful, biannual magazine.

Remember, when you buy a copy of The New Territory, you not only get more intimate with the Lower Midwest. You directly support the people who archive and interpret our region’s collective memory.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri in Fall 2021
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 10: Collective Memory https://newterritorymag.com/product/10/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=10 Fri, 13 Aug 2021 01:00:31 +0000 https://newnewterritory.casagrandfoss.com/product/hoodie-with-logo/ What’s a magazine but a memory-keeper? Something of a place, often, and particular time, always. Our tenth issue holds mystical value as a milestone of memory.

With a cover photo by Osage photographer Addie Roanhorse, writing by Sarah Smarsh, Mason Whitehorn Powell, Robert Langellier, and so many more Midwesterners, this issue is packed with a near-mythical sense of place of the Lower Midwest.

Remember, when you buy a copy of The New Territory, you not only get more intimate with our region. You directly support the people who archive and interpret our region’s collective memory.

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“If we remembered the truth, the descriptions would change…” Sarah Smarsh writes in her Issue 10 piece, Revision.

What’s a magazine but a memory-keeper? Something of a place, often, and particular time, always. Our tenth issue holds mystical value as a milestone of memory. Many independent magazines don’t make it this far, and we intend to collect the Lower Midwest’s memory for much, much, longer. Issue 10 starts with photos of floods and fishing and celestial phenomena over the Sandhills — all themes prone to exaggeration yet recorded here as truth. Then dive into conversations about magazine-making, features on family history, a literature section by some of the heaviest hitters in Midwest writing, and a long piece on Missouri’s state wine grape and how it changes across a small landscape.

Features

+ Burn Before Dying: The memories we raze to preserve the self we want to pass on. Emma Murray. Nebraska.

+ The Control of the Missouri: Mapping the confluence of environmentalism, economics and belonging in the Missouri River Valley.  Robert Langellier. Missouri River Valley.

+ Survival of the Storytellers: The resilience of local journalism and the people telling the stories. Dené K. Dryden. Kansas.

+ Small Towns Have Long Memories: The complications – good and bad – of returning home and reporting on the town that raised you. Bart Schaneman. Nebraska.

+ Wine Country: How Missouri grapes saved the global wine industry 100 years ago and produce wines to be savored today. Taylor Fox. Missouri.

Remember, when you buy a copy of The New Territory, you not only get more intimate with the Lower Midwest. You directly support the people who archive and interpret our region’s collective memory.

 

Details

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri in Summer 2020
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 09: Rebuilding https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-09-rebuilding/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-09-rebuilding Tue, 29 Dec 2020 03:14:20 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=6878 “If anyone asked, we were surviving.” — Elinam Agbo, "Sorry for Your Loss."

Tishomingo, Oklahoma: Embracing the complexities of home. Chautauqua Hills, Kansas: Private land, public good. Wakefield, Nebraska: Flood and family. These, plus a magical mystery tour of the musical Midwest, a reflection on race and class in the U.S. through the lens of a Missouri community washed away, fiction from Elinam Agbo, poetry from Matt Mason, Megan Blakenship and Evan Williams.

Remember, when you buy a copy of The New Territory, you not only get more intimate with the Lower Midwest. You directly support the people who archive and interpret our region’s collective memory.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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“If anyone asked, we were surviving.” — Elinam Agbo, “Sorry for Your Loss.”

Features

+ Tishomingo: Home changes, we change and so, too, can our relationship to it. Tiara Blue. Oklahoma.

+ A Musical Map of the Midwest: Journeying through the soundscape of the region, one town – and artist – at a time.  Aarik Danielsen. Kansas, Nebraska & Oklahoma.

+ Keeping the Chautauqua Hills Bountiful Through Hunting: Crafting alternative land management solutions in Kansas, creating economic and ecological development in the process. Julianne Couch. Kansas.

+ When Advocacy Fails: the Contrasting Faces of Faith and Conviction: The history of Pinhook, Missouri, reflects broader patterns of racialized disinvestment in the U.S. and is rooted in individual stories of strength, loss and family. Elaine J. Lawless & David Todd Lawrence. Missouri.

+ Trophies and Traditions: Exploring the apparent contradictions between hunting traditions and wildlife conservation in Nebraska. Sarah Hoffman. Nebraska.

Plus fiction from Elinam Agbo, poetry from Matt Mason, Megan Blakenship and Evan Williams.

Remember, when you buy a copy of The New Territory, you not only get more intimate with the Lower Midwest. You directly support the people who archive and interpret our region’s collective memory.

 

Details

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri in Summer 2020
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 08: Endurance (Sold Out) https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-08/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-08 Mon, 21 Sep 2020 16:58:07 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=7846 “She will live with an ache for a distance further or faster than she’s ever gone before.” — Jaqueline Alnes, "Trails Unknown."

Lawrence, Kansas: 100 miles on foot. Meskwaki Settlement, Iowa: Storytelling with many voices. Albany, Missouri: grassland river revival. Indiana backroads: Parenthood, music, and memory. Denton and Malcolm, Nebraska: Hunting traditions, wildlife conservation and ubiquitous private land.

Plus fiction by Keija Parssinen, poetry by Danny Caine and Katelyn Delvaux, nonfiction by Jim Reynolds, and stunning Kansas River paintings by Lisa Grossman.

Connect the dots! When you buy a copy of The New Territory, you get more intimate with the Lower Midwest AND you support writers and artists who ensure our cultures endure.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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“She will live with an ache for a distance further or faster than she’s ever gone before.” — Jaqueline Alnes, “Trails Unknown.”

Features

+ WILD WINDS ON THE GRAND: A naturalist believes the grassland river revival is near — and takes a rip-roaring canoe ride to prove it. George Frazier. Missouri.

+ TRAILS UNKNOWN: An ultramarathoner’s journey through Kansas, veganism and the miles that made it possible. Jacqueline Alnes. Kansas.

+ THE WORD COLLECTOR: The writer Ray Young Bear uses a medley of voices to tell the tangled stories of Meskwaki Tribal Settlement. Avery Gregurich. Iowa.

+ BOTH FEET ON THE FLOOR, TWO HANDS ON THE WHEEL: A father reflects on what it means to pass on music to kids with his adolescence in the rearview. Andy Oler. Indiana.

+ TROPHIES AND TRADITIONS: Exploring the apparent contradictions between hunting traditions and wildlife conservation in Nebraska. Sarah Hoffman. Nebraska.

Plus fiction by Keija Parssinen, poetry by Danny Caine and Katelyn Delvaux, nonfiction by Jim Reynolds, and stunning Kansas River paintings by Lisa Grossman.

Connect the dots! When you buy a copy of The New Territory, you get more intimate with the Lower Midwest AND you support writers and artists who ensure our cultures endure.

Details

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri in Fall 2019
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 07: Sanctuaries https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-07-sanctuaries/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-07-sanctuaries Sun, 20 Sep 2020 16:25:59 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=7885 “Splintered, this house must breathe.” — Margaux Griffith in "This House is an Orchard"

Journalism. Art. Place. Lower Midwest.

Lawrence, Kansas: Ceremony and protest in the Wakarusa Wetlands. Aurora, Missouri: Settling on ranching. Hot Springs, Arkansas: When a church lies dying. Oklahoma: Why our public lands are at risk and how we can fight to protect them. Ozark National Forest, Arkansas: Art of the frost flower.

Plus poetry from Margaux Griffith and Jeanetta Calhoun Mish, nonfiction by Katryn Nuernberger, fiction by Christopher Linforth, and art by Allysa Cervantes Hallett.

Connect the dots! When you buy a copy of The New Territory, you get more intimate with the Lower Midwest AND you support writers and artists who ensure our cultures endure.

Details:

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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The New Territory’s Issue 07, titled “Sanctuaries,” is one of the most ambitious issues the magazine has published. In her letter to readers, executive editor Sara Maillacheruvu suggests the value of looking for unexpected places of safety and renewal: “Can’t a sanctuary also be stark, un-beautiful, ragged? Aren’t the most sacred things to us often flawed and imperfect?”

Contributing writers and artists follow this call in their work, seeking unconventional perspectives on the places and communities they know best. Through detailing what her Primitive Baptist Church in Arkansas has lost over years of declining membership, Natalie O’Neal finds language to describe what its community and spirituality means to her. “This religion works in the rural spaces where God appears in creeks and fields and well-worked land,” she writes.

A photo essay by Kelsey Putman Hughes explores how Oklahomans are finding new ways to protect public lands as state park budgets erode. The state pruned Wah-Sha-She State Park from the budget, but the Osage Nation stepped up to protect the land. “When it comes down to it, the people will find a way to preserve what is important to them,” writes Hughes.

Chase Castor documents the rhythms of work, adventure, and family traditions on his family’s farm in the Missouri Ozarks, Four Bar C. While his father’s passion for rodeo has waxed and waned, and he now also sells auto parts to make ends meet, the farm continues to be a place of regenerative peace and possibility for both father and son.

Allysa Cervantes Hallett’s watercolors of plant and animal life, both scientifically precise and artistically whimsical, illuminate the pages of Issue 07’s literature section. Also featured: nonfiction by Kathryn Nuernberger, poems by Margaux Griffith and Jeanetta Calhoun Mish, and fiction by Christopher Linforth. 

In recounting the story of protests to save the Wakarusa Wetlands in Kansas from highway construction, Soren Larsen and Jay T. Johnson document an alliance between Native and non-Native activists that reveals how transformative protest “emerges in the million tiny moments of dialogue and encounter that come from simply by being together in place.”

The New Territory puts The Lower Midwest in the center of the universe,” says founder and publisher Tina Casagrand. Among the magazine’s founding principles is the belief that local contributors are the publication’s strongest asset, as local writers have implicit understanding of the region and access to colorful characters.

Connect the dots! When you buy a copy of The New Territory, you get more intimate with the Lower Midwest AND you support writers and artists who ensure our cultures endure.

Details

  • 128 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri in January 2019
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 06: Hinterlands https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-06-hinterlands/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-06-hinterlands Sat, 19 Sep 2020 17:38:21 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=8993 In Issue 06, as always, The New Territory magazine crystallizes “the Midwest” out of the idea of "Hinterlands" and into knowable pieces. Daniel Tyx tours small towns trying new ways to keep their community running (pg 81). Steven Gerkin shares Midwest-born crime novels that were anything but Midwest nice (pg 25). Olivia Exstrum was a child when the U.S. government raided a packing plant in her hometown. She now revisits the event with clarity, wisdom and unavoidable comparisons to how we treat immigrants today. Finally, Eli Reichman’s documentary of a farm family in North Dakota shaped the theme of this issue. How does life outside of the public eye differ from what we expect? His photographs let the land and people speak for themselves (pg 93).

Each feature is timeless, as is the literature by M. Drew Williams, Elijah Burrell, Molly Wierman, and John Andrews.

Thanks for supporting the journalists and artists of The Lower Midwest. We hope you love their work in this issue as much as we do.

Cover photo by Eli Reichman.

Psst...if you subscribe today, you'd get this issue + free shipping

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The New Territory Magazine is dedicated to telling true stories of land, people, and possibilities in the Lower Midwest.

FEATURES

HELL’S FRINGE

Steve Gerkin

Jim Thompson’s literary legacy in the Lower Midwest

BIG SKY TOURISM

Daniel Clausen

Can Nebraskans learn from Namibia’s ecotourism companies to build an enterprise in the Midwest?

YOU’RE NOT IN KANSAS ANYMORE (YOU’RE IN OMAHA)

Bruce E. Johansen

History of the Land of Oz, with a modern interpretation by artist Torren Thomas

THE GHOSTS OF GRAND ISLAND

Olivia Exstrum

Immigration raids revisited

RURAL REINVENTION

Daniel Blue Tyx

Midwest tour of towns bending rules to stay relevant and make residents’ lives fulfilling

HINTERLANDS

Eli Reichman

As fracking poisons landscapes, the industry upends communal cohesiveness where people live inextricably linked to their property.

Details:

  • 112 pages
  • Perfect bound
  • Full color
  • Printed in Missouri
  • Free shipping for subscriptions

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Issue 04: Coexisting (Digital Download) https://newterritorymag.com/product/issue-04-coexisting-digital-download/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=issue-04-coexisting-digital-download Sun, 22 Sep 2019 12:27:28 +0000 https://newterritorymag.com/?post_type=product&p=6923 "Suppose someone took a hand and created the field in which you find yourself. A vast palm..." — Jordan Durham, "When Explained by Science"

Karval, Colorado: Unexpected wildlife haven. Woodward, Oklahoma: Prairie chickens vs. wind farms. Springdale, Arkansas: Designing a national business. Noel, Missouri: Missouri's tiniest international community, in their own words. In Oklahoma, Krista Langlois writes one of The New Territory's most excellent social justice features in "Too Sick to Go Home, Too Poor to Get Better." In Nebraska, Conor Gearin takes us to part II of his "evolution in the Lower Midwest" trifecta with "Building a Better Swallow." Plus, fiction by Katie Young Foster and poetry by Jordan Durham.

Issue 04 was our first issue to ever sell out. Was it the cover? The fact it's packed with excellent literary journalism and photo essays? The surreal literature section? For the first time (again) you can see for yourself for just $3 in this new digital download offer.

Details:

  • 116 pages (including cover)
  • Full color
  • PDF download with single pages (64.3 MB)

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“Suppose someone took a hand and created the field in which you find yourself. A vast palm…” — Jordan Durham, “When Explained by Science”

Issue 04 was our first issue to ever sell out. For good reason!

Let’s start with the cover photo. “LOVE” spelled in sparklers. Beautiful. It’s a self portrait by Larry Strong, a Marshfield, Missouri, photographer who happened to be our literature editor’s dad.

Features

+ Too Sick To Go Home, Too Poor to Get Better: Micronesian migrants struggle to access health care in Oklahoma and Arkansas.

+ Building A Better Swallow: The cockroach and cliff swallow will inherit the earth.

+ Ears to the Ground: Ranchers and government agents. Prairie dogs and the ferrets that eat them. An unlikely team of rivals is making stewardship work on the plains of eastern Colorado.

+ The Shifting Complexion of McDonald Country: Hope and change in southwest Missouri.

+ Gone with the WInd: Wind energy is great for the environment. Unless you’re a lesser prairie-chicken.

The literature section’s art and writing is surreal, a departure from our norm, and little did we know Katie Young Foster would someday help steer the entire magazine as our second creative director.

Worth checking out. Especially for three dollars. First to sell out, first to go digital. (There’s some poetry in that.) As always, all funds go straight back to paying writers and reaching more readers. Thanks for supporting The New Territory community!

Details

  • 116 pages (including cover)
  • Full color
  • Originally printed in Missouri in Winter 2017
  • PDF download with single pages (64.3 MB)

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