We preach Christ crucified

Cut Bank [ 95% EXTENDED ]

The surrounding Glacier County is a hub for dryland farming , producing vast quantities of wheat and barley that stretch across the prairie [3, 23]. 4. Cultural Crossroads

A 27-foot-tall talking penguin statue greets visitors, a tongue-in-cheek nod to the town's frequent record-breaking winter temperatures. 2. A Literary Powerhouse

Founded in 1973 by the University of Montana’s MFA program, this literary magazine has featured luminaries like William Stafford and Jane Hirshfield [16, 21]. Cut Bank

The town is a critical service hub for the reservation, and local history is deeply tied to the Blackfeet stories and the reclamation of Native narratives in the region [12].

The town’s physical landscape is built on what lies beneath the soil. The surrounding Glacier County is a hub for

In the high plains of northern Montana, where the wind never seems to stop and the horizon stretches forever, sits . Often called the "Coldest Spot in the Nation," this small town is much more than a weather statistic—it is a rugged intersection of Blackfeet heritage, industrial grit, and unexpected literary prestige. 1. The Gateway to the "Crown of the Continent"

Life here requires a specific kind of resilience, whether you're a farmer checking crops in a late-April frost or a writer drafting a novel in a local coffee shop [13, 25]. The town’s physical landscape is built on what

Cut Bank sits on the edge of the , creating a unique cultural blend.