After his death, the Sierra Club published the “The Geography of Hope,” a tribute to Stegner that includes words by many well-known Western writers, from Ivan Doig to William Kittredge to Terry Tempest Williams. Stegner’s legacy, beyond his 16 books and countless short stories, essays, introductions and articles, includes the Wallace Stegner Center for Land, Resources and the Environment at the University of Utah the Wallace Stegner Environmental Center in the San Francisco Public Library the Stegner fellowships at the Creative Writing Program at Stanford, where Stegner taught Abbey, Wendell Berry, Thomas McGuane, Ken Kesey and Larry McMurtry in the writing program he created and served for 25 years, until 1971 and countless other awards and prizes that bear his name. “The only living American writer worthy of a Nobel,” wrote Edward Abbey before the 1993 death of Stegner, whose frontline work with the Sierra Club and the government on environmental issues in the 1960s rounded out his literary reputation to include activist and savior of the West. “Our great citizen-writer,” said author Barry Lopez in a tribute to Stegner. Wallace Stegner is so commonly referred to as “the dean of Western writers” that no one remembers who said it first.
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