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OverviewFor nearly two hundred years, compelling characters have appeared in Nevada's Black Rock Desert and died in interesting and sometimes absurd ways, emblematic of the difficulties of living in the Nevada outback. Surviving the Black Rock Desert requires an amalgamation of wit, grit, and luck. In 2025, a traveler stranded by a flat tire or stuck in the mud during the off-season on the Black Rock Desert can be as isolated as a pioneer with a broken wagon would have been on the Applegate-Lassen trail in the 1840s. Black Rock Dead captures the harrowing, often implausible chronicles of desert calamities in Northwestern Nevada through a collection of real-life stories and tragedies that encapsulate the unique hardship of surviving the Black Rock Desert across the last three centuries. As depicted between these pages, history is a chaotic mix of gossip and glorious tales. The truth is occasionally unbelievable. The stories in Black Rock Dead are a microcosm of the Nevada experience. What is the Black Rock Desert? The Black Rock Desert in Northwestern Nevada is best known for its large flat playa. The playa is one of the remnants of ancient Lake Lahontan, which covered much of northern Nevada until about 9,000 years ago. The playa is roughly 30 miles long and 12 miles wide. Before 2000, it had an expansive, flat, featureless surface that was almost as hard as asphalt during the dry season. The region takes its name from Black Rock Point, a roughly 500-foot-tall black conical rock known as the Black Rock, or Black Rock Point, which the emigrants used as a waypoint in the 1800s. As a distinguishing feature, the Black Rock becomes eerie and otherworldly during frequent and unpredictable windstorms, which kick up a ghostly veil of fine, opaque alkaline dust across the desert, turning the topography into a monochromatic moonscape. The Black Rock Desert is both beautiful and brutal, providing unparalleled solitude and miles of untampered wilderness in the high desert. The Black Rock Desert is a harsh and mercurial mistress offering a vast array of perils. Why Black Rock Dead? In 2025, surviving in the Black Rock Desert remains challenging due to extreme temperatures, rough terrain, water scarcity, and a lack of modern conveniences. Stranded motorists can find themselves in dire conditions, broken down on the numerous dirt roads that traverse hundreds of miles through the region. The desert landscapes can be disorienting, increasing the risk of getting lost. Resources and services are limited throughout the state. Emergency response times can be delayed by hours. Cell phone reception can be challenging, and contacting another person cannot be guaranteed or expected. The history of the Black Rock Desert has been covered in many publications and documentaries. While working on other projects related to the region, the authors of this book were struck by the sheer variety and number of unusual mishaps, tragedies, and deaths that occurred in the area. The following chapters cover the deaths of Emigrants and Indigenous peoples, ranchers, miners, railroad workers, and regular citizens who clashed and tried to endure life in rural Northwest Nevada. Herein are the stories of those who were murdered, frozen to death, burned, drowned, crushed, committed suicide, or overdosed. These stories were gathered from oral histories, newspaper clippings, archives, and historical research inspired by rumors and tales from around town. This book is a collection of anecdotes and incidents the authors have verified as far as known records permit. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Christopher Brooks , Christina PrestonPublisher: Christopher Brooks Imprint: Christopher Brooks Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.449kg ISBN: 9798218043667Pages: 336 Publication Date: 01 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationChristopher Brooks first visited the Black Rock Desert in the late '80s. His career in software afforded him plenty of opportunitiesto visit the desert, get a little work done, and get a little fun done. His first book about the region was published in 2003. Christina Preston holds an M.Sc. in Community and Regional Development from UC Davis. As a community researcher, she has collaborated with various museums, cultural centers, and universities on public history projects. A self-proclaimed ""desert rat,"" she prefers stark landscapes over populated areas and has frequented the Black Rock Desert for over twenty years. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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