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Recommended Reading
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Turn Down the Lights and Embrace the Dark
How light pollution is upending the natural world.
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Feral: Losing Myself and Finding My Way in America’s National Parks
Traveling to each and every national park in the US means lots of memories, good, bad, and everything in between.
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What Do You Really Know About Wind, Anyway?
Where would we be without wind, after all?
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Wanna Be Happier? Build Better Connections
A study spanning generations, the authors of “The Good Life” argue, shows that happiness derives from human connections.
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How Is It Possible the Bicycle Was Invented After the Locomotive?
“Two Wheels Good: The History and Mystery of the Bicycle” is a must read for anyone who’s ever thrown a…
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10 Books You’re Gonna Wanna Read in 2023
From big bears to the boreal forests, here are some books that moved us and helped illuminate what’s worth fighting…
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Book Review: The Wild Salmon Chronicles
Langdon Cook’s fantastic new book “Upstream” traces wild salmon through a human-engineered landscape
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You Need This Field Guide to Smells
In “Nose Dive,” Harold McGee offers a sensory guide to the many odors, often unnoticed, that swirl around us.
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What Can Conservation Learn From Science Fiction?
New works by Western authors explore the brighter futures of our swiftly tilting planet.
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Paddling 2,000 Miles to Meet the ‘Kings of the Yukon’
Read an excerpt from Adam Weymouth’s award-winning, “Kings of the Yukon,” his chronicle of paddling the length of the Yukon…
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Book Review: The Magic of the World’s Soggy Places
In “Fen, Bog, and Swamp,” Annie Proulx explores the marvels of wetlands and the sobering history of their destruction.
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‘Labyrinth of Ice’ Takes You on Harrowing Journey to Farthest North
Read an excerpt from a new tale of a fascinating, grueling polar survival epic.
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Siberia as Vast, Melancholic, and Hilarious In This Masterpiece
Ian Frazier’s ‘Travels in Sibera’ is a grand adventure tale through one of the world’s biggest, and strangest lands.
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A New Biography Resurrects a Western Conservation Writer
Bernard DeVoto’s work has fallen into obscurity, but the land remembers his legacy.
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What Animal Intelligence Reveals About Human Stupidity
The downside of human exceptionalism.
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What Is an Old-Growth Tree Actually Worth?
In setting fines for timber poaching, experts are looking at different ways to calculate the financial value of trees.
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Shoulda Listened to the Trees
Businessmen, lawyers, and scientists weighed the fate of a Tennessee forest. They should have listened to the trees.
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‘Downriver’ is a Paddling Adventure Tale With a Message
The Green River is an important tributary of the Colorado River, rolling through parts of Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado. The…
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The Worst Guide in the World
Just because you’re a great fisherman does not mean you’ll be a great guide. An excerpt from Dylan Tomine’s new…
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Book Review: Helping Water Find Its Own Level
In “Water Always Wins,” Erica Gies shows how “water detectives” are seeking to slow and reshape the flow of a…
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5 Wildly Different Books to Beat the Summer Doldrums
You have two more months of summer—get to readin.’
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If You Cook in a Boat, Van, Cabin, or Campsite, You’ll Want This Book
If you like rad kitchens in mobile and outdoor spaces, you’re gonna love this.
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14 New Environmental Books to Kickstart Your Summer Reading List
Summer won’t last forever (or will it?) so get to reading.
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Book Excerpt: Between an Avalanche and a Hard Place
Back in Adventure Journal 07 we recommended the book Honouring High Places: The Mountain Life of Junko Tabei. It’s a…
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The Cooler People Know About Whitewater, Too
Yeti’s new book, Whitewater, kicks ass.
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A Surprisingly Hopeful Look at the Five Largest Forests Left on Earth
An urgent plea to save the world’s megaforests.
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A New Northwest Anthology Finds Both Terror and Magic in the Darkness
‘Evergreen: Grim Tales & Verses from the Gloomy Northwest’ explores landscapes and life from the Inland Northwest to the Pacific.
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Hey, Remember International Travel?
Read an excerpt from travel writer extraordinaire Bill Arnott’s new collection, “Gone Viking II.”
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Why the Trees Are Marching Northward
In “The Treeline,” Ben Rawlence explores the fate of the Earth’s boreal forests in the climate-change era.
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The Science Behind Aesop’s Menagerie of Wild Animals
In “Aesop’s Animals,” zoologist Jo Wimpenny provides a guided tour of animal behavior drawn from the classic fables.
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Book Review: The Mirage of a Town Without Cellphones
In “The Quiet Zone,” Stephen Kurczy investigates a West Virginia town largely cut off from modern technology.
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Reimagining Humanity’s Obligation to Wild Animals
In “Wild Souls,” Emma Marris explores the worth of individual animals and species, and humanity’s obligations to them.
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5 Award-Winning Outdoor Books for Your End of Summer Reading Pleasure
If you missed last year’s National Outdoor Book Award winners, now is a great time to pick one up and…
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Review: The Surprising ‘Joy of Sweat’
Journalist Sarah Everts delivers a chatty, informative romp through the unusual science and history of perspiration.
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Excerpt: My Life as a Fire Lookout
Read an excerpt from Trina Moyle’s terrific new memoir, “Lookout: Love, Solitude, and Searching for Wildfire in the Boreal Forest.”
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Excerpt: Meet the Ragtag Crew that Were the First to Summit Denali
New book chronicles the first ascent of Denali by an unlikely crew.
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Debunking the Biggest Myth About Wildfires
A new book from ecologist Chad Hanson explains why misunderstanding fire is dangerous for communities, wildlife and fighting climate change.
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How Suzanne Simard Changed Our Relationship to Trees
A healthy forest hums with aboveground stimuli: deer shuffling through dead leaves, breezes ruffling conifer needles, squirrels dropping seeds. The…
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Review: An Open-Eyed History of Wildlife Conservation
Michelle Nijhuis traces the evolution of modern efforts to protect threatened species in “Beloved Beasts.”
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Who Does Bears Ears National Monument Belong To?
In “The Bears Ears,” David Roberts explores the “human history” of a remarkably rich wilderness in southeastern Utah.
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5 Great Adventure Books to Take Your Mind Off Things
You probably have the time to catch up on reading, so catch up with these five faves of ours.
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Review: The Unintended Consequences of Taming Nature
In “Under a White Sky,” Elizabeth Kolbert explores the blowback from our attempts to control the environment.
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The Lost in Canyon Country
A gripping book recounts the many mysterious disappearances in the American Southwest.
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Trip Way, Way Out in the Desert in ‘Desert Oracle’
The “Voice of the Desert,” Ken Layne, brings his strange visions of a strange environment to a great little book.
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Ed Abbey, the Desert Rat, Would be 94 Today—We Raise a Glass
On what would be his 93rd birthday, we salute Ed Abbey.
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A Fervent Call to Protect ‘America’s Amazon’
In “Saving America’s Amazon,” Ben Raines chronicles the wonders of the nation’s most biodiverse river system.
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Why We Need Aldo Leopold’s ‘Land Ethic’ Now More Than Ever
Leopold understood healthy land meant healthy communities, crucial for our splintered cultural landscape today.
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In the Grand Canyon, Scientists Struggle to Bring Back the Bugs
A team of researchers and river guides in the Grand Canyon aim to repair the intricate food web of the…
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How To Not Die In the Woods
The most fun to read survival skills book you can buy.
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A Fresh Look at Our Neanderthal Relatives
In “Kindred,” Rebecca Wragg Sykes reveals how Neanderthal life was far more rich and varied than we ever imagined.
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‘Gone Viking’ Follows Epic Journeys of the Misunderstood, Well, Vikings
Travel like a viking. You know, in book form.
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Finding Wonder and Solace in the Natural World
Helen Macdonald’s “Vesper Flights” brims with small moments of intimate connection with landscapes and animals.
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The Search for the World’s Largest Owl
In “Owls of the Eastern Ice,” conservationist Jonathan Slaght chronicles his daunting field work in Russia’s Far East.
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‘Fathoms’ Is A Lyrical Glimpse Into the World of Whales
Blending science and memoir in a celebration of cetacean life.
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A Pair of Guides to Fossils, Past and Future Ask: How Did We Get Here?
Two new books look at natural history in whole new ways—”Nothing, of course, begins at the time that you think…
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Where Does Teddy Roosevelt’s Environmental Legacy Fit in a Polarized 2020?
New book follows Teddy Roosevelt’s footsteps to see where his model of conservation has led.
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New Book Describes a Hopeful Vision of the Planet’s Future
Take the sunnier path through the coming climate reckoning.
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Meet Charlie Russell: The Man Who Talked With Bears
One of the world’s foremost experts on bear behavior was taught everything he knew by the bears themselves.
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The Surprising Science of Walking and What it Means For Your Hike
There seems to be a direct connection between the speed of walking and the speed of thinking and observation.
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This Is the Awesome Story of How Plants Conquered the Planet
Those trees and plants aren’t just backdrops when we’re outside—they’re highly evolved conquerers.