The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, September 02, 2020, Page 7, Image 7

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Wednesday, September 2, 2020 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon 
7
High Desert Museum adopts writing prize
September  17  is  a  big 
day for the Waterston Desert 
Writing Prize. Not only will 
the sixth annual awards cer-
emony be held, recognizing 
the overall Prize winner, the 
two  finalists  and  the  inau-
gural  student  essay  winner, 
but  also  the  High  Desert 
Museum,  Central  Oregon9s 
renowned  natural  and  cul-
tural  history  museum,  will 
make official its adoption of 
the Waterston Desert Writing 
Prize.
An invitation and link to 
reserve a virtual seat at this 
exciting  event,  scheduled 
for  6:30  p.m.  on  Thursday, 
September  17,  is  available 
on  the  Museum9s  website, 
www.highdesertmuseum.org/
waterston.
Since  its  inception,  the 
Waterston  Desert  Writing 
Prize Awards Ceremony has 
been  hosted  by  the  High 
Desert Museum. The mission 
and goals of the Prize com-
plement  those  of  the  High 
Desert Museum, emphasizing 
the importance of protecting 
deserts  and  creating  impor-
tant conversations about the
issues affecting them.
P r i z e   F o u n d e r   a n d 
President  Ellen  Waterston 
states: <I believe I can speak 
for both boards of directors 
in saying this is a very excit-
ing day. The Museum is posi-
tioned to grow the breadth of 
reach and depth of the Prize 
and, in so doing, will acquaint 
a  larger  literary  audience 
with the Prize as well as the 
extraordinary  spectrum  of 
programs  and  activities  the 
Museum offers.=
High  Desert  Museum 
Executive Director Dana
Whitelaw calls the transition 
<a natural fit.=
<It  has  been  an  honor  to 
partner with the Prize for six 
years and a privilege to con-
tinue  the  brilliant  work  of 
the Waterston Desert Writing 
Prize,=  she  says.  <Sharing 
inspiration about and insight 
into  desert  landscapes  and 
cultures  crafted  by  such 
gifted writers aligns perfectly 
with  the  Museum9s  mission 
to  foster  understanding  of 
and dialogue about the High 
Desert.=
Now in its sixth year, the 
Waterston  Desert  Writing 
Prize  honors  creative  non-
fiction  that  illustrates  artis-
tic  excellence,  sensitivity 
to place, and desert literacy, 
with the desert as both sub-
ject  and  setting.  The  Prize 
recognizes the vital role des-
erts play worldwide as eco-
systems  and  in  the  human 
narrative.  Since  its  found-
ing,  the  Prize  has  received 
submissions from across the 
United States and from more 
than 20 countries. The overall 
winner receives a cash prize, 
currently $2,500, and a two-
week  residency  at  PLAYA, 
an  artists9  and  scientists9 
residency campus in Summer 
Lake, Oregon.
In addition to the formali-
ties of the transfer of the Prize 
to  the  care  of  the  Museum, 
the September 17 virtual cel-
ebration will feature a reading 
by the 2020 Prize recipient, 
Hannah Hindley, of Tucson, 
Arizona,  for  her  winning 
book  proposal,  <Thin  Blue 
Dream,= a collection of inter-
connected stories that explore 
the Sonoran Desert9s disap-
pearing  urban  waterways. 
THE GARDEN ANGEL
Organic landscaping...
We fee d the soil!
Have a great summ er, Sisters!
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Prize finalists Eli Beck, Salt 
Lake  City,  Utah,  and  Leath 
Tonino, Ferrisburg, Vermont, 
will also offer brief readings 
from  their  proposals.  Beck 
was recognized for his sub-
mission <Rude Awakenings,= 
an  examination  of  wilder-
ness therapy programs in the 
Four Corners region of New 
Mexico.
Tonino submitted <Nooks 
and  Crannies:  Mapping  the 
(Unmappable)  Waterpocket 
Fold with Prose Vignettes,= 
a  documentation  of  his 
experiences in Capitol Reef 
National Park. The essay by 
Al Lehto, the winner of the 
inaugural student essay writ-
ing  competition,  reflects  on 
the  many  hours  their  artist 
mother spent painting in the 
Oregon Badlands Wilderness 
east  of  Bend,  and  the  times 
they would join her.
T h e   P r i z e   Aw a r d s 
Ceremony  is  free,  however 
registration  is  required  in 
order  to  receive  the  ZOOM 
link.  For  more  informa-
tion contact info@waterston
desertwritingprize.org  or 
call  541-480-3933.  To  reg-
ister for the 2020 Waterston 
Desert Writing Prize Awards 
Ceremony,  visit  www.high
desdertmuseum.org/
waterston.
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