Laterj veteran to beinhall of fame
Ex-editor, writer Bach joins journalism icons
As an education reporter, Lisa Kim Bach held leaders accountable and highlighted the good in our schools. As a student of the world, she surrounded herself with books and found the poetry in everyday life.
The longtime Las Vegas Review-journal reporter and editor will be inducted into the Nevada Newspaper Hall of Fame on Saturday, two years after her death from cancer at age 49.
Bach began her journalism career at The Modesto Bee in 1988, and went on to work for the Clovis Independent and The Fresno Bee in California and the News-sentinelinfortwayne, Indiana.
After joining the Review-journal in 1997, she recorded more than 1,700 bylines and wonnumerousawards for her coverage of schools and other public institutions entrusted to care for children. In
2007, her work on a series of stories documenting failures within the Clarkcountydepartmentoffamily Services earned the Review-journal the coveted community service award from the Nevada Press Association, which also oversees the Hall of Fame.
“I’m thrilled that the NPA is recognizing the many contributions that Lisa made to journalism in the state,” said Carri Geer Thevenot, the Review-journal’s metro editor. “She was dedicated to her profession and wanted to return to the important work she did at the newspaper. This honor ensures that she will continue to serve as a role model for journalists — not only at the RJ but throughout Nevada.”
Geer Thevenot and Natalie Burt, Bach’s longtime friends and former colleagues, nominated her for the Hall of Fame. The induction will take place Saturday night at the press association’s annual banquet at Palace Station.
Bach was born at a U.S. military facility outside Seoul and came to the United States as an infant.
She grew up in Augusta, Kentucky, a town of about 1,200 people on the Ohio River. where she stoked her love of literature and the Kentucky Wildcats. Bach’s younger brother, Daniel, said her name appears on the checkout cards of every book that was in Augusta’s small library before 1984.
“She was there every single week,” he said. “I could never get my sister to go play with me. She was always reading.”
After high school, she followed her family west, graduating with honors from Fresno State University in 1989 after majoring in journalism and English.
Arguably her biggest contribution to the craft came after she left the education beat.
She was promoted to assistant city editor in 2008, and soon became a trusted and beloved mentor to a generation of young reporters who depended on her wisdom, wisecracks and well-stocked candy jar. She improved their stories, broadened their vocabulary and even gift-wrapped a few scoops for them using the sources she continued to cultivate.
And if you didn’t want to talk shop, she was always happy to chat about movies, music, travel, binge-worthy TV and, of course, books of any kind — all of it delivered with her trademark chuckle.
Now her name will be enshrined in the same Hall of Fame as another Nevada newspaper reporter who dabbled in literature, a guy by the pen name of Mark Twain.
“My sister probably would have been very humble about it and would have downplayed it,” Daniel Bach said.
She never really thought of herself as a writer, he said. She considered herself a journalist.
Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbrean on Twitter.