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  • This week on "The Range," a new arts leader reminds us why art matters. Also, how an artist’s struggles have influenced her work.
  • Maia Sharp returns with her tenth solo album, Tomboy, talks leaving behind expectations and the importance of the saxophone.
  • A new arts leader reminds us why art matters. And we have news from Wichita and around the state.
  • "All the Way to the River" is an impressive mashup of Elizabeth Gilbert’s candid storytelling, along with poems, drawings, prayers and doodles that she crafted during her partner's death and her own recovery from sex and love addiction.
  • Indigenous maternal mortality rates have been rising in Kansas for at least two decades. A group of Kansas women is training to bridge modern medicine and cultural practices in birth. More about the doulas … and news from Wichita and around the state.
  • A Nebraska prairie scientist spent two years photographing a single square meter of land – and getting to know its hundreds of species. We’ll hear how he hopes to open people’s eyes to a vanishing ecosystem. And we have news from Wichita and around the state.
  • John Kenney's newest novel, "I See You've Called in Dead," tells the story of a middle-aged obituary writer who uses an unplanned leave of absence to explore what life is really about.
  • Birth rates are declining in Kansas for most age groups. Women in their 40s, however, are having more babies than they used to. We'll hear more about the trend of mothers in their 40s, plus news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Some small libraries in Kansas are receiving a big gift. We have the details, and news from Wichita and around the state.
  • Jonny Campolo and his brother Nick, formerly of P.E. and Pill, return with a debut album from their new band Pets. Or pets. What's in a name, anyway?
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