Trail Memoir
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Books, Authors, Trails

  • Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home

    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

    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

    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

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  • The Most Successful Trail Memoir

    The Most Successful Trail Memoir

    Cheryl Strayed’s landmark memoir Wild, subtitled “From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail,” published in March 2012, is one of the few trail memoirs to break out to a general audience and the only one by a woman. In May of that year Oprah Winfrey made it the first selection in her re-launched

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  • The Funniest Trail Memoir

    The Funniest Trail Memoir

    A Walk in the Woods. Bill Bryson was better known as the witty and urbane author of popular science books like The Body and A Short History of Nearly Everything before he reached a mid-life professional crisis and dropped it all for a spell to hike the Appalachian Trail. One last adventure before it was

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  • The First Modern Trail Memoir

    The First Modern Trail Memoir

    When Colin Fletcher set out to walk the length of California in March of 1958, he started two outdoor trends that are now commonplace: long-distance backpacking, and trail memoir. At the time Fletcher had a spotty resume for normal life, and the perfect one for a long thru-hike. He had been a captain in the

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  • Precursor to All Trail Memoir: John Muir

    Precursor to All Trail Memoir: John Muir

    Though it doesn’t precisely fit our definition of trail memoir, because it doesn’t recount the hike of a well-defined footpath, there is little doubt that John Muir’s My First Summer in the Sierra is a forerunner to all books in the genre. Muir’s experience of living in the woods and mountains, and his state of

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  • The Trail Memoir Genre

    The Trail Memoir Genre

    Trail memoir is a subset of adventure travel memoir. Walking and reflecting are its essence. For our purposes here, trail memoir is the recounting of a long hike, on an easily identifiable route, often in wilderness, told in first person by the one that walked it. I’m going to resist for now including other self-powered

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Trail Memoir

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