Search Query
Show Search
News
HPPR Regional News
HPPR Regional Arts, Culture and History
NPR Top Stories
HPPR Regional News
HPPR Regional Arts, Culture and History
NPR Top Stories
HPPR Features
Growing on the High Plains
High Plains History
High Plains Outdoors
HPPR Poets on the Plains
HPPR Radio Readers Book Club
HPPR's One Small Step Podcast
Literary Landscapes in Kansas: From the Ground to the Airwaves
Little Spouse on the Prairie
Looking Back
Our Nowhere: Panhandle Histories
Planting the Plains
Tales From HPPR
Growing on the High Plains
High Plains History
High Plains Outdoors
HPPR Poets on the Plains
HPPR Radio Readers Book Club
HPPR's One Small Step Podcast
Literary Landscapes in Kansas: From the Ground to the Airwaves
Little Spouse on the Prairie
Looking Back
Our Nowhere: Panhandle Histories
Planting the Plains
Tales From HPPR
Music
105 Live
Classical Music Amarillo
Dead Air - Official Tapes
Friday Night Blues
High Plains Morning
HPPR Living Room Concerts & Ambassador Tours
Irie Astra
Retro Cocktail Hour
Western Swing Radio Rambler
What the Folk?
Search Playlists
105 Live
Classical Music Amarillo
Dead Air - Official Tapes
Friday Night Blues
High Plains Morning
HPPR Living Room Concerts & Ambassador Tours
Irie Astra
Retro Cocktail Hour
Western Swing Radio Rambler
What the Folk?
Search Playlists
Programs
HPPR Connect Program Schedule
HPPR Mix Program Schedule
Programs A-Z
HPPR Connect Program Schedule
HPPR Mix Program Schedule
Programs A-Z
Listen
Digital Listening
FM stations & Coverage
FM Coverage Map
Podcasts
Report A Reception Problem
Digital Listening
FM stations & Coverage
FM Coverage Map
Podcasts
Report A Reception Problem
Community Calendar
Support
Giving Tuesday
Planned giving
IRA Giving
Stock and Securities Donation
Donor-Advised Fund Giving
Vehicle Donation
Major Gifts
Underwriting
Foundation Grants
Giving Tuesday
Planned giving
IRA Giving
Stock and Securities Donation
Donor-Advised Fund Giving
Vehicle Donation
Major Gifts
Underwriting
Foundation Grants
About
Contact
Board & Governance
HPPR Board of Directors background
Employment Opportunities
History
People
Public Documents
Studios
Contact
Board & Governance
HPPR Board of Directors background
Employment Opportunities
History
People
Public Documents
Studios
© 2026
Menu
In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
HPPR Mix
On Air
Now Playing
HPPR Connect
All Streams
News
HPPR Regional News
HPPR Regional Arts, Culture and History
NPR Top Stories
HPPR Regional News
HPPR Regional Arts, Culture and History
NPR Top Stories
HPPR Features
Growing on the High Plains
High Plains History
High Plains Outdoors
HPPR Poets on the Plains
HPPR Radio Readers Book Club
HPPR's One Small Step Podcast
Literary Landscapes in Kansas: From the Ground to the Airwaves
Little Spouse on the Prairie
Looking Back
Our Nowhere: Panhandle Histories
Planting the Plains
Tales From HPPR
Growing on the High Plains
High Plains History
High Plains Outdoors
HPPR Poets on the Plains
HPPR Radio Readers Book Club
HPPR's One Small Step Podcast
Literary Landscapes in Kansas: From the Ground to the Airwaves
Little Spouse on the Prairie
Looking Back
Our Nowhere: Panhandle Histories
Planting the Plains
Tales From HPPR
Music
105 Live
Classical Music Amarillo
Dead Air - Official Tapes
Friday Night Blues
High Plains Morning
HPPR Living Room Concerts & Ambassador Tours
Irie Astra
Retro Cocktail Hour
Western Swing Radio Rambler
What the Folk?
Search Playlists
105 Live
Classical Music Amarillo
Dead Air - Official Tapes
Friday Night Blues
High Plains Morning
HPPR Living Room Concerts & Ambassador Tours
Irie Astra
Retro Cocktail Hour
Western Swing Radio Rambler
What the Folk?
Search Playlists
Programs
HPPR Connect Program Schedule
HPPR Mix Program Schedule
Programs A-Z
HPPR Connect Program Schedule
HPPR Mix Program Schedule
Programs A-Z
Listen
Digital Listening
FM stations & Coverage
FM Coverage Map
Podcasts
Report A Reception Problem
Digital Listening
FM stations & Coverage
FM Coverage Map
Podcasts
Report A Reception Problem
Community Calendar
Support
Giving Tuesday
Planned giving
IRA Giving
Stock and Securities Donation
Donor-Advised Fund Giving
Vehicle Donation
Major Gifts
Underwriting
Foundation Grants
Giving Tuesday
Planned giving
IRA Giving
Stock and Securities Donation
Donor-Advised Fund Giving
Vehicle Donation
Major Gifts
Underwriting
Foundation Grants
About
Contact
Board & Governance
HPPR Board of Directors background
Employment Opportunities
History
People
Public Documents
Studios
Contact
Board & Governance
HPPR Board of Directors background
Employment Opportunities
History
People
Public Documents
Studios
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Living on Both Sides
Hi, I am Marco Macias, a history teacher here at Fort Hays State University. Thank you for tuning in, and welcome to a BookByte of The Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border, a fascinating narrative from Francisco Cantu. In the book, he describes his experiences growing up on the border and then pursuing a career in border patrol for several years. Traversing through the desert, he learns to understand the inhumanity of forcing immigrants across the desert and returns to civilian life.
Listen
•
3:59
Objects from the Borderlands
In 2007 I began making yearly trips/pilgrimages to walk the border and photograph objects left behind by undocumented migrants crossing the U.S–Mexico border between Matamoros, Mexico, and Brownsville, Texas. My work takes an ever-evolving imagined space and concretizes it as a collection of specific objects, first as they are found and photographed in the landscape, then as they are re-photographed and archived, and, finally, as they are united in exhibitions.
Listen
•
3:59
Waking Up
I’m Hannes Zacharias from Lenexa for High Plains Public Radio, Radio Reader’s Book Club. The book is “The Line Becomes a River, Dispatches from the border” by Francisco Cantu’. “A book that whips across your face like a sandstorm, embedding bits of the desert into your shin that, like it or not, you’ll carry forward” says the San Francisco Chronicle.The book describes in striking and disturbing detail the reality of the current state of life on the US southern border for those enforcing and circumventing OUR immigration policies.
Listen
•
3:59
Something We Can't Look Away From
Hi I’m Valerie a radio reader from Topeka and I wanted to share my thoughts about our final book which is part of this fall’s Radio Readers theme of “Rivers: Meandering Meanings”, the book is the Line Becomes a River by Francisco Cantú.
Listen
•
3:59
Always Changing River
Hi, I am Marco Macias, a history teacher here at Fort Hays State University. Thank you for tuning in, and welcome to a BookByte of The Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border, a fascinating narrative from Francisco Cantu.
Listen
•
3:59
Growing on the High Plains: Rose of Sharon
Today's episode takes aim at the pop of color one might see on the usually-muted High Plains landscape: the Rose of Sharon.
Listen
•
4:29
Threat or Asset?
This is Nicole English coming to you from the Sociology Department at Fort Hays State University for HPPR's Book-Bytes. This is a discussion of the book, The Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border, by Francisco Cantú.This 2018 book gives a very unabashed view of what working as a Border Agent along the Mexican Border is like, and the experiences the author relates to readers illustrate his own moral struggles with the work. The author, Francisco Cantú, is a child of Mexican immigrants, and draws upon his personal experiences as a border agent for four years in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, to create a touching and emotionally trying memoire.
Listen
•
3:59
Diversions Along a Border
I’m Mike Strong from Hays for HPPR, Radio Reader’s Book Club. The book is “The Line Becomes a River” by Francisco CantuNot since World War II have refugee numbers been so high. 82.4 million people. These people did not leave their homes and jobs and lives by choice or whim. They are fleeing for their lives, even more so than their livelihoods.
Listen
•
3:59
Why I Am Here
Hi, my name is Marcos Morales. I’m glad to share my story with the Radio Readers Book Club. I have been here in southwest of Kansas since November of 2003. I am from Guatemala from a little poor place. I came here because my dad brought me here in U.S.A. He’s here with me. I came here because I thought I had more opportunity than living in my country because when I was younger what I thought was to go to school to have a career, improve myself so that’s one of the reasons that I came. And that’s what I am doing right now.
Listen
•
3:59
Growing on the High Plains: Purple Smoke Bush
“Yesterday and tomorrow cross and mix on the skyline. The two are lost in a purple haze. One forgets, one waits.” ― Carl Sandburg / "Purple haze all in my brain. Lately, things, they don't seem the same." —Jimi Hendrix
Listen
•
4:29
Previous
84 of 30,248
Next