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The Art of Memoir

Mary Karr is the bestselling author of the 1995 memoir The Liar’s Club. She’s also published five volumes of poetry and is a professor of English Literature at Syracuse University, where her students have included Cheryl Strayed. With those credentials you might expect a highfalutin literary voice in her book on memoir, but far from
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Becoming Odyssa

Jennifer Pharr Davis has a long outdoor resume including thru hikes on virtually every continent, the Women’s Fastest Known Time on the Appalachian Trail in 2008, then the Overall FKT on the AT in 2011. Becoming Odyssa is the story of her first adventure, hiking the AT in 2005, and how she became who she
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An Ensemble Trail Story

Barney Scout Mann is considered an elder statesman of the trail community. He’s been backpacking most of his life, is a triple-crowner, and has contributed to our iconic national trails through leadership positions at the Pacific Crest Trail Association, the Continental Divide Trail Coalition, and the Partnership for the National Trails System. His Journeys North:
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A Short Course in Storytelling

My background is in technical writing with years of documenting software during my career, then blogging about personal finance during retirement. When I set out to write my memoir, I knew I could construct sentences efficiently, recount events precisely, and describe scenery accurately. But, after receiving my first critiques from experienced memoirists and novelists, I
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A Bestselling Old-School Trail Memoir

AWOL on the Appalachian Trail. If Amazon reviews are an indication, David Miller’s AWOL on the Appalachian Trail may be the third-best selling trail memoir of all time, behind only Wild and A Walk in the Woods. Published in 2010 about a 2003 hike, Miller had a jump on many writing trail memoirs. And his
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A Meta Trail Memoir

On Trails. Robert Moor is an eloquent essayist who thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2009, a rainy year. With the mountain vistas obscured by mist, Moor began pondering the connections under his feet. Eventually he traveled the world to learn about all kinds of trails and produced a New York Times bestseller and winner of
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Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home

Heather Anderson, trail name “Anish,” went from being an overweight bookworm as a child to one of the most accomplished extreme endurance athletes in the world. She finished the 2600-mile Pacific Crest Trail in the astounding self-supported Fastest Known Time, male or female, of 60 days, 17 hours, 12 minutes. How did she accomplish that
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An Unlikely Trail Memoir

The Unlikely Thru-Hiker. Derek Lugo is a young Black man making the rounds of the New York City comedy scene when a job ends unexpectedly. What to do with all that free time? He had read Bill Bryson’s A Walk in the Woods, but never seriously considered hiking the Appalachian Trail. Until now. A self-described
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Thru-Hiking Will Break Your Heart

Thru-Hiking Will Break Your Heart: An Adventure on the Pacific Crest Trail. Carrot Quinn, confused about her identity and her future, decides to take a hike. On the Pacific Crest Trail. A minimalist at heart, she soon embraces her sparse, ultralight trail life. Quinn is new to backpacking at the start of her hike, but

