Flip through our current issue on-line.
December issue of Utah Stories Magazine
Flip through our current issue on-line.
I am a story teller and journalist. I have a passion for farmers, local craftspeople, and folks who aspire to create, build and grow their business in the local marketplace. Why local? By supporting locally-owned businesses we create more opportunity for entrepreneurs, and we claim our sovereignty to shape our communities how we want to see them. I aspire to build Utah Stories Magazine into a household Utah name, and assist Utah businesses and makers with marketing. On the journalism side of things my passion is investigative journalism that offers true insight into issues. I believe strongly in the forth estate: strong, meaningful, insightful journalism is essential to a free market Democracy.

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Frisco, Utah: The Untold Story of the West’s Most Notorious Ghost Town
Once a wild silver mining town, Frisco, Utah, was infamous for its nightly violence and lawless streets. Known as the “toughest mining town in the West,” its fortunes changed after a catastrophic mine collapse. Today, the deserted remains of Frisco, with its decaying kilns and empty streets, tell the story of a town that lived fast and died young. The mysteries of its vanished lawman and the outlaws who once ruled the streets still linger in its desolate landscape.
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Utah Book Bans Ignite Cultural Clash: Educator John Arthur on Local Control
A battle over book bans is sweeping Utah’s schools, pitting state laws against local communities’ rights to shape education. Utah Teacher of the Year John Arthur steps into the fray, challenging restrictions that he believes rob students of vital perspectives and the freedom to explore. Are blanket bans the answer, or are we sacrificing young minds in a cultural clash?
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Why Utah’s Homelessness Crisis Needs a Radical Solution: The Peer-Led Village That’s Succeeding Where Government Programs Fail
Utah’s homelessness crisis is getting worse, despite billions in taxpayer dollars spent on traditional solutions. But a bold, peer-led project in Salt Lake City is defying the odds, delivering life-changing results with a human-first approach. The Other Side Village is run by people who have been there—survivors of homelessness, addiction, and incarceration—and they’re proving that a radical, no-bureaucracy model can achieve what the government hasn’t. Could this be the breakthrough we’ve been waiting for?
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WWII Pearl Harbor Survivor’s Last Adventure: A Utahn’s Journey Across Pacific Battlefields
In his final chapter, 98-year-old WWII veteran and Pearl Harbor survivor Ed Carroll set out on a journey of a lifetime — honoring the memory of his fallen comrades across the Pacific battlefields. With stories never told before, unexpected encounters, and the admiration of strangers at every turn, this incredible Utahn became a living legend one last time before passing away at 99.