Desert Magazine was founded, edited and published from 1937 to 1958 by Randall Henderson (1888–1970). New editors followed until the magazine closed print publication in 1985. It was revived as an on-line magazine in 2006.[3]
Desert Magazine was revived as an archival online magazine, the Desert Magazine e-zine journal, in 2006. It contains all the entries and illustrations that were published in print from 1937 to 1985.[4][5] A newsblog is also produced about the magazine called the Desert Magazine Weblog.[3]
Others
Desert Magazine is also the name of a monthly desert lifestyles magazine sent to subscribers to the Palm Springs daily newspaper The Desert Sun.[6]
^Dan Piepenbring. "The Magazine of the Southwest". The Paris Review. No. July 17, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
^Budlong, Tom; Brooks, Joan (1997). The Desert magazine : subject index : all 534 issues of Desert magazine, November 1937 to June/July, 1985, plus all five issues of American desert magazine, November/December 1992 to Fall 1993. Spokane, WA: A. H. Clark. p. 525. ISBN 978-0870622816. OCLC 37892651.
^ a b cDesert Magazine: History. Retrieved July 7, 2010
^http://mydesertmagazine.com/ Desert Magazine: e-zine journal. Retrieved July 7, 2010
^ISSN 0011-9237; OCLC 1566284, 760793933
^Desert Sun – Desert Magazine (subscription required)
Further reading
Ambrose, Marion (1979). Nevada articles in Desert magazine. Nevada Historical Society. ISBN 9780870622816. OCLC 10126623.
Brigandi, Phil (2004). Barnstorming the Desert: the Life of Randall Henderson, Founder of Desert Magazine and a Pioneer Pilot of the Desert Southwest. Henderson, NV: Howard W. Cannon Aviation Museum. p. 43. ISBN 978-0974912400. OCLC 71144217.
McKenney, J. Wilson (1972). Desert Editor ... the story of Randall Henderson and Palm Desert. Georgetown, California: Wilmac Press. p. 188. ISBN 9780870622816. LCCN 79190619. OCLC 448170. LCC PN4874.H457 M3
Wild, Peter (2004). Desert Magazine: The Henderson Years. Johannesburg, California: The Shady Myrick Research Project. p. 112. OCLC 56193617.
Wild, Peter (2005). Marshal South, of Yaquitepec. Johannesburg, California: The Shady Myrick Research Project. p. 157. OCLC 58796769. – South wrote a series of highly popular "Desert Refuge" articles (1940–1946) about his primitive life on the desert