The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, May 06, 2020, Page 19, Image 19

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WRITING PRIZE:
Youth wrote on 
8The Badlands9
Continued from page 18
my  thoughts  in  my  head. 
Then  I  come  back  and  edit 
and rearrange things and that 
often  takes  longer  than  the 
actual writing process.=
Lehto submitted her work 
to  the  Waterston  Prize  and 
was the winning recipient of 
a $250 scholarship.
<I am grateful that people 
read my piece and it is nice
for  it  to  be  acknowledged,= 
Lehto said. 
Lehto  will  be  attending 
the University of Oregon in 
the fall and plans to keep up 
with  their  writing  over  the 
summer.  They  run  a  book 
and literature club with their 
literature professor from RPA
as well.
<He let me create the cur-
riculum  for  this  club  and 
I  plan  on  really  focusing 
on  becoming  an  educator,= 
Lehto said.
The  Waterston  Desert 
Writing Prize has postponed 
the  annual  award  reception 
event due to COVID-19 but 
expects the event to be held 
September 10 (see related
story below). More informa-
tion can be found about all
the writing prize winners this 
year  at  https://www.water
stondesertwritingprize.org/.
Wednesday, May 6, 2020 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon 
The Nugget Newspaper Crossword
By Jacqueline E. Mathews, Tribune News Service
AZ writer wins Waterston
Desert Writing Prize
H a n n a h   H i n d l e y   o f 
Tucson, Arizona, is the win-
ner  of  the  2020  Waterston 
Desert Writing Prize.
Guest judge, noted author 
Robert Michael Pyle, and the 
Waterston  Desert  Writing 
Prize  Board  of  Directors 
made  the  selection  last 
month.
Eli Beck, Salt Lake City, 
Utah,  and  Leath  Tonino, 
Ferrisburgh,Vermont  were 
Prize finalists. The winner of 
the Prize9s inaugural student 
desert writing contest is Al
Lehto, a senior at Redmond 
Proficiency Academy (see
related story, page 18).
Winners and finalists will 
be  honored  and  offer  read-
ings at the annual reception 
and awards ceremonies at
the  High  Desert  Museum, 
currently  scheduled  for 
Thursday,  September  10, 
at  6  p.m.  The  event  was 
rescheduled  from  June  due 
to  COVID-19-related  con-
straints.  The  event  will 
also  feature  <A  Desert 
Conversation=  address-
ing  this  year9s  theme  of 
<Climate  Change  in  the 
Desert.=  Featured  panelists 
include Robert Michael Pyle, 
author  of  30  books,  includ-
ing  <Wintergreen,=  which 
won  the  John  Burroughs 
Medal  for  distinguished 
nature writing, his first novel, 
<Magdalena  Mountain,= 
and <Where Bigfoot Walks: 
Crossing  the  Dark  Divide,= 
which  has  been  adapted  to 
a  movie  titled  <The  Dark 
Divide.=
Also  on  the  panel,  envi-
ronmental  writer  Dahr 
Jamail is the author of <The 
End of Ice: Bearing Witness 
and Finding Meaning in the 
Path of Climate Disruption.= 
Jamail is a recipient of
numerous honors, including 
the  Martha  Gellhorn Award 
for Journalism for his work in 
Iraq and a 2018 Izzy Award 
for Outstanding Achievement 
in  Independent  Media  for 
his reporting on the Climate 
Crisis.  A  third  panel  mem-
ber is pending. Free creative 
writing workshops led by the 
panelists  precede  the  eve-
ning9s events.
Hannah  Hindley9s  win-
ning submission, <Thin Blue 
Dream,=  proposes  a  collec-
tion of interconnected sto-
ries that explore the Sonoran 
Desert9s disappearing water-
ways,  the  fish  that  used  to 
call them home, and the suc-
cesses and complications that 
come  with  efforts  to  help 
restore depleted tributaries
with city effluent.
<It9s  a  strange  story  of 
ghost  rivers,  dead  fish,  and 
resilience  in  the  heart  of 
urban spaces in the desert,= 
Hindley stated
 Currently completing her 
Master  of  Fine Arts  (MFA) 
in Creative Nonfiction at
the  University  of  Arizona, 
Hindley is also a wilderness
guide and naturalist. She will 
be  presented  with  a  $2,500 
cash  award  and  a  residency 
at PLAYA in Summer Lake, 
Oregon,  at  the  Prize9s  sixth 
annual award event.
Now in its sixth year, the 
Waterston  Desert  Writing 
Prize  awards  will  again 
be  held  at  the  High  Desert 
Museum.  Dana  Whitelaw, 
Executive  Director  of  the 
M u s e u m ,   w i l l   c o - h o s t 
the  evening  with  Ellen 
Waterston,  President  of  the 
Waterston  Desert  Writing 
Prize. The Prize honors cre-
ative  nonfiction  that  illus-
trates artistic excellence, sen-
sitivity to place, and desert
literacy,  with  the  desert  as 
both subject and setting. The 
Prize recognizes the vital role 
deserts play worldwide in the 
ecosystem  and  the  human 
narrative.  For  more  infor-
mation  about  the Waterston 
Desert  Writing  Prize,  visit 
www.waterstondesertwriting
prize.org , email info@water
stondesertwritingprize.org or 
call 541-480-3933. 
19
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