Good Book to Read About Hiking Experience

These Books Will Inspire Yous to Put Them Down and Get Outside

12 Hiking and Adventure Books That Will Inspire You to Get Outside- The CloudLine Blog

At CloudLine, the but thing we like better than a not bad pair of hiking socks is a skilful book, and our favorite books are nigh the adventures we live for. Even when nosotros count every ounce in our packs when backpacking, nosotros never retrieve twice about bringing a skillful volume. Here we have gathered 12 of our favorite outdoor books for hikers, climbers, paddlers, and the audacious.


Nifty Books for Hikers

Grandma Gatewood's Walk: The Inspiring Story of the Adult female Who Saved the Appalachian Trail

12 Hiking & Adventure Books Worth Reading

When most grandmothers are busy with knitting and games of bridge, Emma Gatewood gear up out on a walk and became the starting time woman to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail. She hiked the trail 2 more times one time at 72 and again at 75. Grandma Gatewood was a pioneer of the ultra-light backpacking movement, hiking the trail with just a bootleg shoulder bag containing an army blanket, rain jacket, and a shower curtain for a tarp. Written using her diaries, letters, trail journals, and interviews with family and friends she met while hiking the AT, Grandma Gatewood'south Walk is an inspiring story that shows that adventure isn't simply for the immature.

A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail

A Walk in the Woods

Y'all might have seen the movie starring Robert Redford, but as ever the volume is better. Bryson shares his journey along the Appalachian Trail in a mode that is both humorous and approachable. He isn't a professional athlete or breaking any records, he is a middle-anile and out of shape, which makes the average reader experience like they could hike the AT as well. A Walk in the Woodsisn't but well-nigh one hiker's journeying, but as well explores the history of the trail, ecosystems, animals, and boyfriend hikers.

Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

Wild past Cheryl Strayed is another book most thru-hiking that has recently been adjusted for the silverish screen. If you liked the picture show you will love the volume. Wildtells the story of a young woman seeking healing and a new life on the Pacific Crest Trail. Grieving from the loss of her female parent, a failed marriage, and the effects of heroin addiction Cheryl sets off on the PCT with an overloaded pack and no hiking feel. Forth the style, she shares what she learns and intersperses flashbacks from events in her past that lead her to a solo hike on the Pacific Crest Trail.


Great Books for Climbers

The Tower: A Chronicle of Climbing and Controversy on Cerro Torre

The Tower

The Belfry explores the controversy surrounding the first ascent of Cerro Torre in 1959 by Cesare Maestri and Toni Egger. Tragically Egger died in an avalanche on the descent, leaving Maestri the only witness to the claimed pinnacle. Since then the controversy has swirled, with climbers attempting to retrace Maestri's claimed road finding no show of bolts, ropes, or even the same features of the route that he describes. The Tower goes across investigating the controversy surrounding the start ascent and also explores the nature of climbing and why some find meaning in dangerous ascents.

Touching the Void: The True Story of One Human being's Miraculous Survival

Touching the Void

Touching the Void may be one of the greatest survival stories in the history of climbing. Friends Joe Simpson and Simon Yates had successfully summited the unclimbed west confront of Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes, when on the descent Simpson fell and badly broke his leg. The story of the pairs fight for survival, hard choices made, and the unlikely survival of both climbers makes for a page turner that you may finish in one sitting.

Alone on the Wall

Alone on the Wall

In Solitary on the Wall Alex Honnold recounts 7 of the climbs that take fabricated him a living fable of climbing. Alex specializes in climbing gratuitous solo: significant alone and with no ropes. Nosotros admire Alex not only for his adjacent level climbing abilities merely too because he is a true dirtbag who lives in a van so he can dedicate every bit much time as possible to climbing and other outdoor pursuits. Alex is constantly asked about why he climbs free solo and if he is afraid of falling, Alone on the Wall explores these questions while bringing us into the mind of 1 of the all-time climbers in the history of the sport.


Great Books for Paddlers

Rowing the Atlantic: Lessons Learned on the Open Ocean

Rowing the Atlantic: Lessons Learned on the Open Ocean

Rowing the Atlantic is another inspiring story about an epic adventure changing a life for the better. Roz Fell left a corporate job she hated and a bad marriage to became the commencement adult female to row across the Atlantic. Nosotros love her story because she had the guts to walk abroad from the safety of a adept job and find the life she wanted. She at present holds 4 Guinness Records for ocean rowing. During her crossing of the Atlantic, her stove failed early on leaving her to swallow cold meals. Her oars and backup oars broke leaving her to row with patched up oars for over half the journey. The list of equipment failures grows from there, but somehow Roz kept on track and made information technology to the finish.

Paddlenorth: Adventure, Resilience, and Renewal in the Chill Wild

Paddlenorth: Adventure, Resilience, and Renewal in the Arctic Wild

Jennifer Kingsley is an adventurer at heart. Her degree in biology and masters of fine arts in writing serves her well as she recounts her arctic adventures paddling the Back River in Paddlenorth. Joined past five fellow adventurers the squad endures frigid temperatures, howling winds, raging rapids, and growing tensions as the stress of the adventure weigh on the group. One of our favorite parts of this page-turning tale is the recounting of many of the legendary stories of earlier explorers, who less well equipped oftentimes never returned from their adventures in the chill.

Running the Amazon

Running the Amazon

In 1985, a group of 11 explorers set up off to be the first to successfully run the Amazon river from head to ocean. The journey begins on a goat path loftier in the Andes where water trickles from the glacial ice with the squad hiking until the waters expand enough for kayaks. Along the 4200 mile journey, the grouping faces deadly rapids, encounters with rebel fighters, and passing through cocaine plantations run by unsafe drug lords. Later on vi months of paddling only 4 of the squad makes it to the Atlantic.


Swell Books for Adventurers

Microadventures: Local Discoveries for Great Escapes

Microadventures

Humphreys is a professional adventurer with an impressive list of accomplishments including iv years cycling around the world, rowing across the Atlantic, walking across arid deserts and now popularizing the concept of microadventures. Every bit Alastair explains, a microadventure is small, shut to home, inexpensive merely gets you out of your comfort zone and experiencing something new. Virtually of us piece of work 9-v and nosotros come home after piece of work to dinner and time inside, yet we have xvi hours before we accept to be dorsum in the office, why not go for a micro gamble overnight every at present and then on a work nighttime?

Into the Wild

Into the Wild

Into the Wild has been one of my favorite books since I first read it when I was twelve. I dreamed of post-obit in "Alexander Supertramp's" footsteps. Of course, McCandless' adventure ends with his death, but the mystery of how and why was function of what captivated my young imagination. In Into the Wild, Jon Krakauer reconstructs McCandless' adventures from letters, his journals, and meeting with people he met along his journey. Fifty-fifty if you've already read Into the Wild, read it again and yous'll be inspired to live your life with more adventure.

One Human's Wilderness: An Alaskan Odyssey

One Man's Wilderness: An Alaskan Odyssey

I Man'southward Wilderness is the memoir of Dick Preonneke, who spent near thirty years living alone in the remote Alaskan wilderness. Preonneke kept a detailed periodical and video recordings documenting his daily life including how he built his cabin, raised food, and hunted. The video recordings were turned into a popular documentary which airs on PBS during their pledge drives. Afterwards his death, Preonneke donated his cabin to the national park service and it attracts many visitors. Read I Man's Wildernessand you just might exist convinced to build a motel of your own in the wilderness.


If you have a favorite book we missed hither share in the comments below, we are ever looking for volume recommendations from beau adventurers!

Read next: 5 John Muir Quotes to Inspire Your Next Hiking Adventure!

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Source: https://www.cloudlineapparel.com/blogs/cloudline/12-hiking-adventure-books-worth-reading

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