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About Ken Layne
"The reason Desert Oracle works is that it's always trying to elicit that feeling, the awe and wonder that the desert reveals to you when you listen hard enough. Layne believes it's not an accident that religious awakenings, UFO sightings, walkabouts, and other revelations occur in the desert. It's a consequence of solitude, stark beauty, and the tenacious life that only the desert has." -- Max Genecov, Pacific Standard
"It's 10 p.m. Friday night, and devoted listeners within range of KCDZ 107.7 FM in Joshua Tree tune in, while others from Echo Park to Boston stream the atmospheric show online. 'Night has fallen on the American desert,' host Ken Layne says in his deep, hypnotic drawl. He lulls listeners into the quietude of the desert, then rattles them with chilling tales of Bigfoot sightings, secret military UFO programs, missing hikers, and any number of myths and conspiracies involving an eclectic and eccentric cast of oddballs and experts who phone in from across the Southwest."
-- Steven Biller, Palm Springs Life
Reviews of Ken Layne's 2011 novel "Dignity":
"Layne's epistolary novel is not comparable to its classic predecessors like 'Frankenstein' or 'Dracula' but far more similar to the New Testament of the Christian Bible. Like Paul the Apostle's writings to the early churches after his conversion, the author of these letters, the mysterious 'N,' spreads similar messages. The difference, of course, is in the theology, which is more akin to the writings and views of John Muir and Edward Abbey." -- The Rumpus
"But to understand the social mood as embodied by a group like Occupy, it may help to look at literature that captures its zeitgeist. One of the books that seems to have become a standard bearer for the Occupy movement is Ken Layne's 'Dignity.' In a book that can only be described as a series of modern-day letters on the gospel of communal simplicity, you can see what kind of world some of the Occupiers might envision: communities occupying vacant suburban or exurban subdivisions, farming the land themselves, bartering with doctors and the like, and shunning modern technology." -- Minyanville.com
"In style, 'Dignity' is an epistolary novel, as if it were Paul writing the Galatians. In theme, Layne takes on our separation from the land via our vampiric computer screens, and commands us back to nature. In focus are many of Layne's longtime obsessions: the housing market, the vulgarities of both rich and poor, the built environment .... A book that starts out cynical and frightening ends with hope." -- FourStory.org
Ken Layne, known for his "acerbic wit and devastating missives on the state of contemporary America," has been a writer and editor at Gawker, Wonkette, LA Examiner, and many newspapers and magazines. His prescient 2011 novel "Dignity" is a gripping denunciation of online media and the "void of the screen" that foresaw Occupy Wall Street, the sinister use of social media in national elections, and the institutional lawlessness that rises up in moral vacuums. He lives and works in the Mojave Desert Wilderness.
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Blog postMight be a nutty new year on the national news, but here in the desert we are just trying to get along and not got crushed. What happened at the Yucca Valley protest on Friday? Well good luck getting the straight story on that. With guest Brendan Maze and new sounds by RedBlueBlackSilver.
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Tonight at 10 p.m., from Amboy to Zzyzx on Z 107.7 FM, or streaming from Z1077FM.com or streaming via Tune In or get the free podcast.
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Blog postFrom a skeletal homesteader cabin on a cold Mojave night, it’s the annual Desert Oracle Christmas Special. New Mexico writer Anna Merlin joins us to talk about the winter holidays in Santa Fe. New solstice sounds by RedBlueBlackSilver.
Become a Patron!
Tonight at 10 p.m., from Amboy to Zzyzx on Z 107.7 FM, or streaming from Z1077FM.com or streaming via Tune In or get the free podcast.
Merry Christmas, pigs.
3 weeks ago Read more -
Blog postdesert-oracle:
#114: A MILLION TREES A BURNIN’ #114: A MILLION TREES A BURNIN’
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It’s our show before Christmas
And all through the cabin
Not a creature is breathin’
Because of the stabbin’
We pay a visit to Amboy, and to the burnt forest of Joshua trees at Cima Dome, Mojave National Preserve. That’s right, it’s Episode #114. Get in.
DESERT ORACLE, VOL. 1: Our new book is available everywhere, please enjoy responsibly. (SORRY IT1 month ago Read more -
Blog postBecome a Patron!
It’s our show before Christmas
And all through the cabin
Not a creature is breathin’
Because of the stabbin’
We pay a visit to Amboy, and to the burnt forest of Joshua trees at Cima Dome, Mojave National Preserve. That’s right, it’s Episode #114. Get in.
DESERT ORACLE, VOL. 1: Our new book is available everywhere, please enjoy responsibly. (SORRY IT’S BACKORDERED AT BOOKSHOP.ORG, WE’VE ALERTED THE AUTHORITIES.)
New sou1 month ago Read more -
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Blog postdesert-oracle:
#113 THE SECRET DESERT
Tonight we share the tale of the Krill Papers, strange legends of Cold War space-alien conspiracies, located right in the very heart of the Nevada desert wilderness.
Speaking of, we are also joined by Patrick Donnelly, Nevada state director of the Center for Biological Diversity, which along with Nevada native tribes and desert lovers everywhere is celebrating a victory.Ever been to the Desert…
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Blog postInterstate Demo by the Buckets
LINER NOTES by Ken Layne
San Francisco was so cheap in the 1990s that people would move there when they ran out of money. You could get around on a $35 monthly MUNI pass, cable cars included, and there was always a rundown Victorian in need of another roommate. There were plenty of bar jobs, temp jobs, restaurant jobs, part-time work that afforded the luxury of doing the important stuff: boozy nights, bookstore afternoons, art and music.
1 month ago Read more -
Blog postTonight we share the tale of the Krill Papers, strange legends of Cold War space-alien conspiracies, located right in the very heart of the Nevada desert wilderness.
Speaking of, we are also joined by Patrick Donnelly, Nevada state director of the Center for Biological Diversity, which along with Nevada native tribes and desert lovers everywhere is celebrating a victory. Ever been to the Desert National Wildlife Refuge? Well whether you ever set foot there or not, it’s safe again, for1 month ago Read more -
Blog postHello, you can order a subscription at http://desertoracle.com , thanks!
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Blog postA new show for Friday night, yes! And on SUNDAY, 12/6/2020, join Ken Layne and Anna Merlan for a Skylight Books virtual event, where we’ll be telling ghost stories and reading something weird from the new book and talking with you, if you choose to talk to us. Virtually, sadly. No whiskey & kissin’. Maybe next time. And we don’t know who “Lockdown Willie” is, either. It just sounded good.
Whatcha doing this Sunday? Join us as we travel to the virtual Mojave with @Desert_Oracle, @J2 months ago Read more -
Blog postPhoto by Utah DPS.
What’s going on with that mysterious Utah monolith? What’s going on with Brendan Maze and his new “plague refugee” Substack newsletter? The small-town desert real-estate market is hot, for now, and he’s got some tips on the sorts of under-appreciated properties you might be able to afford. Especially if 10 or 12 of you go in on it, together. This is Episode #111.
New soundscapes from RedBlueBlackSilver, and don’t forget to check out his new album, Five Flora2 months ago Read more -
Blog postAn orphan child from Cincinnati loved the scriptures and lived a live of gold-mine adventure in the Almost-Old West before winding up in a bomber-plane factory in Los Angeles, creating death-delivery systems for the permanent Cold War. Anxious over this atomic nightmare, yet optimistic enough to think humanity could survive it, Frank Antone Martin built an enormous concrete Jesus in his Inglewood driveway.
Such is the tale. Tune in to hear it all, the whole sordid thing. It’s Episode2 months ago Read more -
Blog postIt’s a Halloween Full Moon weekend and you better prepare for something else that’s coming up quick: the Great Conjunction of 2020. When Saturn and Jupiter grow ever closer in our night sky, until their Great Conjunction as winter solstice arrives, on December 21. With guest C. Del Desierto telling tales of counting eagles in the Anza-Borrego wilderness. With new sounds by RedBlueBlackSilver. On the FM radio from Amboy to Zzyzx (Fridays at 10 p.m. on Z 107.7 FM), or streaming from Z1077FM.com3 months ago Read more
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Blog postIT’S HALLOWEEN TIME, and this episode is for your October night-time, please listen responsibly. And if you enjoy the program, we appreciate your support at http://patreon.com/desertoracle. And did you know our new issue, #9, has already gone out to subscribers and is available at fine retailers in Joshua Tree, Moab, Yucca Valley, Los Angeles, Palm Springs & etc.? It’s true. Oh and we’ve got a hardcover book on the way, you can pre-order it today and get it fresh in your mailbox on public3 months ago Read more
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Blog postPublisher website: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374139681
Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/books/desert-oracle-volume-1-strange-true-tales-from-the-american-southwest/9780374139681?aid=197
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Desert-Oracle-Strange-American-Southwest/dp/0374139687
3 months ago Read more -
Blog postHello! I should really do something about this place, mop the floors, burn some incense, etc. Meanwhile, I’m at DESERT ORACLE, both the radio show/podcast and the print journal (subscribe for $25 & get four issues as I publish them), and regrettably I am on Twitter, and Desert Oracle is on Instagram, and a lot of good weird projects are happening in 2020, including a desert book to be published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, a vinyl reissue I’m “curating” for Joyful Noise Records, a noir s1 year ago Read more
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Blog postdesert-oracle:
#043: HIGHWAYS & ALIENS
Here’s the map from tonight’s audio road trip; please use wisely.
Also on tonight’s episode of Desert Oracle Radio: Our friend Jeremy Corbell joins us to discuss & debate the strange tale of Bob Lazar, subject of Corbell’s new documentary, Bob Lazar: Area 51 & Flying Saucers. If you’re in the Los Angeles area, we encourage you to attend the premiere of this all-new movie at the Ace Hotel theater…
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Blog postdesert-oracle:
#042: OF FIRE AND MONSTERS
Night has fallen on the desert, and that’s when we like to tell monster stories. Weird tales.
When there’s trouble on the edge of civilization—where the wilderness meets what mankind makes—well here we encounter fierce things both natural and supernatural.
New soundscapes from RedBlueBlackSilver tonight, and a visit from our Phoenix friend Jason P. Woodbury.
Subscribe at iTunes or whereveryou…
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Blog postdesert-oracle:
#041: CULMINATION OF THE PLEIADES
Many wonders over the desert skies—both known and unknown—give reason to be out on cool autumn nights, celebrating rituals. Tonight we address the real reason for Halloween (and how you can celebrate it on Nov. 21), tell monster stories around the campfire, and share the glad tidings of Oumuamua, the alien space probe that shot by Earth last year.
EVENT ALERT: Host & DESERT ORACLEeditor Ken…
View On Wor2 years ago Read more -
Blog postacehotel:
Strange things happen in the desert. Mystery lights, Dead Horse Mountains, snake tales and alien sightings. Ghost towns, outsider artists, sagebrush trails and singing sand dunes. Luckily for us, we have the oral histories of Ken Layne and his field guide Desert Oracle, a handy gem published in Joshua Tree starring the macabre, weird and wild stories of the southwest desert. Starting Weds, Oct 31 at Ace Hotel & Swim Club, Ken relays the strange tales, weird facts and loc2 years ago Read more -
Blog postdesert-oracle:
EPISODE #038: HORRORS OF THE SOLAR LODGE
What if Crowleyan magick is bad? The Solar Lodge outpost in the California Desert is what we’re talking about. Also: Brendan Maze calling in from Arizona on a bad line. And: A very short desert-noir collaboration via Twitter with John Lurie.
Subscribe at iTunes or wherever you choose to get your podcasts.
Deep new soundscapes tonight Joshua Tree’s own by RedBlueBlackSilver. (Have you heard his…
<2 years ago Read more -
Blog postdesert-oracle:
EPISODE #037: LYCANTHROPES OF THE WEST
Now is the time for DESERT ORACLE RADIO, and this time we’re all going to Skinwalker Ranch. And we’re going with Jeremy Corbell, director of the new documentary Hunt for the Skinwalker. Listen live on KCDZ 107.7 FM in the High Desert, or subscribe to the podcast and get new episodes on Friday nights.
The strange sounds you hear tonight are by RedBlueBlackSilver, including sounds from his moody…
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Blog postFriday, July 13, 7 PM @valleybarphx, it’s Desert Oracle Radio live on stage w/ musical guests Boxhead Ensemble. Strange tales & weird times…”3 years ago Read more
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Blog postEPISODE #033: AN ESTIMATE OF THE SITUATION: https://art19.com/shows/desert-oracle-radio/episodes/958c3ef9-d584-41fd-8e28-0b70065e4436
3 years ago Read more -
Blog postdesert-oracle:
EPISODE #029: THE LOST KINGDOM OF NYE
It’s Episode #029, for your listening enjoyment. Sure is busy around here this week. Apparently there’s a music festival down in the Low Desert. And: We remember the late, great Art Bell, with some help on the Wild Card Line from Jason P. Woodbury … who also happens to be the author of an interesting article in the current DESERT ORACLE, about the Casa Grande Domes. As for the call-in line, call… View On WordPress
3 years ago Read more -
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Blog postdesert-oracle:
EPISODE #028: COYOTES IN SPRINGTIME
It’s springtime and the High Desert is very busy—not just with visitors taking Instagram pictures, but with the creatures, the creatures waking up and crawling out and feeling frisky, as they say.
3 years ago Read more -
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EPISODE #027: IN THE NIGHT ON AMBOY ROAD
Sure is nice to get on the road and get out of town. So we’ve heard, anyway. Let’s get in one of these cars and head out to the Mojave Wilderness, a night drive. Never know what’ll happen out here. In this second episode from the little desert trailer, we have RedBlueBlackSilver on the scene, in the Outpost Project JT yeller trailer, during the recent Curate Joshua Tree’s “FOUND!” show. You’re… View On WordPress
3 years ago Read more -
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EPISODE #025: UFOS ON THE JUNGIAN DESERT
People sure are talking a lot about UFOs these days. Haven’t heard so much about this persistent mystery for decades. Why now, why again? We’ve got three all-new tracks from Joshua Tree’s own RedBlueBlackSilver tonight, and in the order in which you’ll hear them, they are: “Telescope Peak,” “Sunburst,” and “Dirty Devil River.” Everybody should have a swim, or maybe a sand bath, in the Dirty Devil… View On WordPress <3 years ago Read more -
Blog postdesert-oracle:
EPISODE #023: WINDBLOWN TRASH, BEAUTIFUL BILLBOARDS & OLD CAMP CADY
Our 23rd episode on the 23rd day of the month, what could be finer? We’re taking a trip out to Camp Cady on the Mojave River, whether we’re welcome or not, and regardless of what happened with Mr. Pantages. And what about those beautiful California Desert National Monuments billboards on the 62? Breanne Dusastre from the 29 Palms Inn tells us why wild desert is good for the critters and goo3 years ago Read more
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The cult-y pocket-size field guide to the strange and intriguing secrets of the Mojave—its myths and legends, outcasts and oddballs, flora, fauna, and UFOs—becomes the definitive, oracular book of the desert
For the past five years, Desert Oracle has existed as a quasi-mythical, quarterly periodical available to the very determined only by subscription or at the odd desert-town gas station or the occasional hipster boutique, its canary-yellow-covered, forty-four-page issues handed from one curious desert zealot to the next, word spreading faster than the printers could keep up with. It became a radio show, a podcast, a live performance. Now, for the first time—and including both classic and new, never-before-seen revelations—Desert Oracle has been bound between two hard covers and is available to you.
Straight out of Joshua Tree, California, Desert Oracle is “The Voice of the Desert”: a field guide to the strange tales, singing sand dunes, sagebrush trails, artists and aliens, authors and oddballs, ghost towns and modern legends, musicians and mystics, scorpions and saguaros, out there in the sand. Desert Oracle is your companion at a roadside diner, around a campfire, in your tent or cabin (or high-rise apartment or suburban living room) as the wind and the coyotes howl outside at night.
From journal entries of long-deceased adventurers to stray railroad ad copy, and musings on everything from desert flora, rumored cryptid sightings, and other paranormal phenomena, Ken Layne's Desert Oracle collects the weird and the wonderful of the American Southwest into a single, essential volume.
"But to understand the social mood as embodied by a group like Occupy, it may help to look at literature that captures its zeitgeist. One of the books that seems to have become a standard bearer for the Occupy movement is Ken Layne's 'Dignity.' In a book that can only be described as a series of modern-day letters on the gospel of communal simplicity, you can see what kind of world some of the Occupiers might envision: communities occupying vacant suburban or exurban subdivisions, farming the land themselves, bartering with doctors and the like, and shunning modern technology." -- Minyanville.com