favorite trail reading material?
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desert spiritGuides: 0 | Official Routes: 0Triplogs Last: none | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
- Joined: Nov 11 2008 6:20 am
- City, State: Tucson, AZ
favorite trail reading material?
Do you have favorite reading material to take on backpacks? Any particular authors?
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azbackpackrGuides: 27 | Official Routes: 23Triplogs Last: 78 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 771 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
I go to the library and pick up a small paperback by some author I like. I look for a battered old one, or go to used bookstore. I look for one that is likely to capture my attention quickly, usually a mystery or something like that.
I have a big library of outdoor literature at home, a big collection of Grand Canyon river running books, Southwest non-fiction and tales of Alaska, Arizona history, Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, Colin Fletcher, Charles Bowden, Ann Zwinger, Michael Ghiglieri, etc. etc. But as for what I actually carry on a backpacking trip, it varies a lot. I have been known to carry a larger book on a short weekend trip, when weight and space are not a consideration. Recently I dragged the biography Harvey Butchart: 20,000 miles in the Grand Canyon, a 400 page tome, on a weekend trip. I really like to read at night in my sleeping bag with a flashlight, and it does help me to relax and fall asleep, so it's important to me.
Some purists are picky about what they bring, saying that your consciousness should be raised and all that New Age stuff, so you should bring poetry or philosophy. But I don't like reading poetry or philosophy. (snore) I like reading what interests me at that moment. I think it's silly for other people to tell you what you should be reading in the outdoors.
I have, however, been known to bring an old paperback copy of The Man Who Walked Through Time on backpacking trips in the Canyon. Last time I did this we ended up camping at one of the places Colin had camped on the South Bass Trail, and also we found a very small but interesting rock formation alongside the trail that he had described perfectly. Interesting to see how it had held up after almost 50 years! Although I and others have had criticism of this book for various reasons, I still enjoy re-reading it about every 5 years or so.
I have a big library of outdoor literature at home, a big collection of Grand Canyon river running books, Southwest non-fiction and tales of Alaska, Arizona history, Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, Colin Fletcher, Charles Bowden, Ann Zwinger, Michael Ghiglieri, etc. etc. But as for what I actually carry on a backpacking trip, it varies a lot. I have been known to carry a larger book on a short weekend trip, when weight and space are not a consideration. Recently I dragged the biography Harvey Butchart: 20,000 miles in the Grand Canyon, a 400 page tome, on a weekend trip. I really like to read at night in my sleeping bag with a flashlight, and it does help me to relax and fall asleep, so it's important to me.
Some purists are picky about what they bring, saying that your consciousness should be raised and all that New Age stuff, so you should bring poetry or philosophy. But I don't like reading poetry or philosophy. (snore) I like reading what interests me at that moment. I think it's silly for other people to tell you what you should be reading in the outdoors.
I have, however, been known to bring an old paperback copy of The Man Who Walked Through Time on backpacking trips in the Canyon. Last time I did this we ended up camping at one of the places Colin had camped on the South Bass Trail, and also we found a very small but interesting rock formation alongside the trail that he had described perfectly. Interesting to see how it had held up after almost 50 years! Although I and others have had criticism of this book for various reasons, I still enjoy re-reading it about every 5 years or so.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
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desert spiritGuides: 0 | Official Routes: 0Triplogs Last: none | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
- Joined: Nov 11 2008 6:20 am
- City, State: Tucson, AZ
Re: favorite trail reading material?
"I really like to read at night in my sleeping bag with a flashlight,"
omg ... I'm so glad I'm not the only one who does that
omg ... I'm so glad I'm not the only one who does that

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JeffshadowsGuides: 28 | Official Routes: 7Triplogs Last: 4,048 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 4,206 d
- Joined: Jan 30 2008 8:46 am
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
It's a great time for audio osmosis for class, etc...I seem to remember everything I assimilate when in "the zone."
AD-AVGVSTA-PER-ANGVSTA
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Al_HikesAZGuides: 11 | Official Routes: 14Triplogs Last: 1,037 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 3,177 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
FASB Exposure drafts. I'm probably the only one and I don't recommend them.
Anybody can make a hike harder. The real skill comes in making the hike easier.
life is like a roll of toilet paper. The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes. Andy Rooney
life is like a roll of toilet paper. The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes. Andy Rooney
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te_waGuides: 3 | Official Routes: 0Triplogs Last: 1,667 d | RS: 2Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 1,867 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
im not sure what that is intended to mean Liz, but if I know you, you'll agree on oxymoron. Ed Abbey for instance was a purist, but despised all the "new age" crap and probably with good reason.azbackpackr wrote:Some purists are picky about what they bring, saying that your consciousness should be raised and all that New Age stuff
I agree reading will relax your mind and help it fall asleep. I do bring a small book on solo overnights. Last time this happened, was in West Fork when I went in solo and read all but the last few pages of Krakauer's "into the wild". It was raining so i had little to do anyway...
squirrel!
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JeffshadowsGuides: 28 | Official Routes: 7Triplogs Last: 4,048 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 4,206 d
- Joined: Jan 30 2008 8:46 am
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
I can see eye-to-eye with Abbey to a point in that some of what he considered "new age crap" was a distraction from his ultimate goals. It's hard to get people motivated to go out and sabotage things when they're stoned and beating bongos...te-wa wrote:im not sure what that is intended to mean Liz, but if I know you, you'll agree on oxymoron. Ed Abbey for instance was a purist, but despised all the "new age" crap and probably with good reason.azbackpackr wrote:Some purists are picky about what they bring, saying that your consciousness should be raised and all that New Age stuff
I agree reading will relax your mind and help it fall asleep. I do bring a small book on solo overnights. Last time this happened, was in West Fork when I went in solo and read all but the last few pages of Krakauer's "into the wild". It was raining so i had little to do anyway...
AD-AVGVSTA-PER-ANGVSTA
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JimmyLydingGuides: 111 | Official Routes: 94Triplogs Last: 540 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,112 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
The Economist and/or one of the Truly Tasteless Jokes books
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Davis2001r6Guides: 6 | Official Routes: 15Triplogs Last: 5,678 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
After many times of forgetting to bring something to read, I REALLY knew where I was going the next day after looking at the map till it was sleep time. 

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azbackpackrGuides: 27 | Official Routes: 23Triplogs Last: 78 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 771 d
- Joined: Jan 21 2006 6:46 am
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
Well, what I meant had nothing whatever to do with Ed Abbey. He was furthest from my mind, he's been dead almost 20 years. This train of thought is more current. It seems I have read this idea in some magazines, on some websites, maybe not in books. It is this: There seems to be a sub-group of backpackers who believe ALL BACKPACKERS should bring only very high-minded reading material when we are out in the wilderness, or no reading material at all. This sub-group would favor poetry, philosophy, and books of a spiritual nature. The only problem I have with this idea is that they seemed to be saying that we ALL should do as they do.
The reason I called them purists is because they are advocating we all are supposed to cultivate a spiritual consciousness while backpacking, and that somehow if we are reading Michael Crichton (RIP Michael--he just passed away) or Tony Hillerman (ditto, he just passed away) we are polluting our minds with mindless pulp fiction.
I think if they want to lug their Bible, Book of Mormon, Bhagavad-Gita, Koran, Tibetan Book of the Dead, Masters of the Far East, or the Apocrypha OR William Blake, Socrates, etc. etc., on their bp trips, well groovey-dude for them. But they want to tell ME to read this sort of literature? That is where I part ways with them, that they are advocating what I might choose to read! I don't want to read deep spiritual stuff on a trip, nor poetry nor philosophy. I find it very tedious reading, and it would just be dead weight in my pack.
I'd rather read pulp fiction BECAUSE it is easier to read, and I really only need to bring it because it helps me to fall asleep. I do find a spiritual connection when I'm out there, but I tell ya, once I crawl into my sleeping bag all I want to do is to prevent insomnia. And I have brought spiritual reading on a trip, but it didn't help me with the spiritual connection at all, it just felt kind of contrived. The spiritual thing may happen to you, but not because you read a book. It just happens.
Now do you see what I'm saying?
The reason I called them purists is because they are advocating we all are supposed to cultivate a spiritual consciousness while backpacking, and that somehow if we are reading Michael Crichton (RIP Michael--he just passed away) or Tony Hillerman (ditto, he just passed away) we are polluting our minds with mindless pulp fiction.
I think if they want to lug their Bible, Book of Mormon, Bhagavad-Gita, Koran, Tibetan Book of the Dead, Masters of the Far East, or the Apocrypha OR William Blake, Socrates, etc. etc., on their bp trips, well groovey-dude for them. But they want to tell ME to read this sort of literature? That is where I part ways with them, that they are advocating what I might choose to read! I don't want to read deep spiritual stuff on a trip, nor poetry nor philosophy. I find it very tedious reading, and it would just be dead weight in my pack.
I'd rather read pulp fiction BECAUSE it is easier to read, and I really only need to bring it because it helps me to fall asleep. I do find a spiritual connection when I'm out there, but I tell ya, once I crawl into my sleeping bag all I want to do is to prevent insomnia. And I have brought spiritual reading on a trip, but it didn't help me with the spiritual connection at all, it just felt kind of contrived. The spiritual thing may happen to you, but not because you read a book. It just happens.
Now do you see what I'm saying?
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
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JeffshadowsGuides: 28 | Official Routes: 7Triplogs Last: 4,048 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 4,206 d
- Joined: Jan 30 2008 8:46 am
- City, State: Old Pueblo
Re: favorite trail reading material?
I knew what you were getting at; those people are usually the same ones who go out once a year and do some high-mileage, low-AEG trip with their pristine pastel-colored designer outdoors clothing and stick their nose in the air when they see the likes of me coming down a nearby peak. Hey, at least they're out there...azbackpackr wrote:Well, what I meant had nothing whatever to do with Ed Abbey. He was furthest from my mind, he's been dead almost 20 years. This train of thought is more current. It seems I have read this idea in some magazines, on some websites, maybe not in books. It is this: There seems to be a sub-group of backpackers who believe ALL BACKPACKERS should bring only very high-minded reading material when we are out in the wilderness, or no reading material at all. This sub-group would favor poetry, philosophy, and books of a spiritual nature. The only problem I have with this idea is that they seemed to be saying that we ALL should do as they do.
The reason I called them purists is because they are advocating we all are supposed to cultivate a spiritual consciousness while backpacking, and that somehow if we are reading Michael Crichton (RIP Michael--he just passed away) or Tony Hillerman (ditto, he just passed away) we are polluting our minds with mindless pulp fiction.
I think if they want to lug their Bible, Book of Mormon, Bhagavad-Gita, Koran, Tibetan Book of the Dead, Masters of the Far East, or the Apocrypha OR William Blake, Socrates, etc. etc., on their bp trips, well groovey-dude for them. But they want to tell ME to read this sort of literature? That is where I part ways with them, that they are advocating what I might choose to read! I don't want to read deep spiritual stuff on a trip, nor poetry nor philosophy. I find it very tedious reading, and it would just be dead weight in my pack.
I'd rather read pulp fiction BECAUSE it is easier to read, and I really only need to bring it because it helps me to fall asleep. I do find a spiritual connection when I'm out there, but I tell ya, once I crawl into my sleeping bag all I want to do is to prevent insomnia. And I have brought spiritual reading on a trip, but it didn't help me with the spiritual connection at all, it just felt kind of contrived. The spiritual thing may happen to you, but not because you read a book. It just happens.
Now do you see what I'm saying?
AD-AVGVSTA-PER-ANGVSTA
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JeffshadowsGuides: 28 | Official Routes: 7Triplogs Last: 4,048 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 4,206 d
- Joined: Jan 30 2008 8:46 am
- City, State: Old Pueblo
Re: favorite trail reading material?
Although, I did see a guy out in the middle of nowhere one time sitting in a meditation pose on a boulder reading the I Ching wearing an alligator smile. I doubt the notion of how much more refined he was than the others out that day even entered his mind 

AD-AVGVSTA-PER-ANGVSTA
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big_loadGuides: 0 | Official Routes: 1Triplogs Last: 595 d | RS: 3Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,484 d
- Joined: Oct 28 2003 11:20 am
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
If not, please don't ask again. I'm afraid azbackpackr will pop right out of my monitor on the next round.azbackpackr wrote:Now do you see what I'm saying?

Seriously, though, I prefer natural history, guidebooks, local history, geology, almost anything that will occupy my thoughts. I get a kick out of reading Sigurd Olson when I'm in the desert and Edward Abbey or Craig Childs when I'm in the lush, green mountains.
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JoelHazeltonGuides: 16 | Official Routes: 1Triplogs Last: 16 d | RS: 1Water Reports 1Y: 2 | Last: 77 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
I went with my girlfriend to Goodwill a couple weeks ago so she could find some cheap used crap to throw together as a Halloween costume, and while browsing used book section I spotted a stack of 1960's Arizona Highways magazines for $.69 each. I cleaned the section out (18 to be exact) and they have been traveling with me lately. Before that, the most recent book I've brought along was "Walk Across America" by Peter Jenkins. Highly recommended! I generally prefer outdoor themed reading material when I'm camping.
"Arizona is the land of contrast... You can go from Minnesota to California in a matter of minutes, then have Mexican food that night." -Jack Dykinga
http://www.joelhazelton.com
http://www.joelhazelton.com
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desert spiritGuides: 0 | Official Routes: 0Triplogs Last: none | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
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- City, State: Tucson, AZ
Re: favorite trail reading material?
Don't you just love finding treasures like that??? A couple years ago I found an entire collection of The Black Stallion series at a funky little antique store over in Ajo. I was crazy about those stories when I was a kid, and I cleaned them out, too ... all 20-some of them.azpride wrote:I spotted a stack of 1960's Arizona Highways magazines for $.69 each. I cleaned the section out (18 to be exact) and they have been traveling with me lately.
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JoelHazeltonGuides: 16 | Official Routes: 1Triplogs Last: 16 d | RS: 1Water Reports 1Y: 2 | Last: 77 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
Yeah, I was really really really excited. They seem to have been quite a bit better back then, too.desert spirit wrote:Don't you just love finding treasures like that??? A couple years ago I found an entire collection of The Black Stallion series at a funky little antique store over in Ajo. I was crazy about those stories when I was a kid, and I cleaned them out, too ... all 20-some of them.azpride wrote:I spotted a stack of 1960's Arizona Highways magazines for $.69 each. I cleaned the section out (18 to be exact) and they have been traveling with me lately.
"Arizona is the land of contrast... You can go from Minnesota to California in a matter of minutes, then have Mexican food that night." -Jack Dykinga
http://www.joelhazelton.com
http://www.joelhazelton.com
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JimmyLydingGuides: 111 | Official Routes: 94Triplogs Last: 540 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,112 d
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
I try to avoid potboilers when I'm camping/backpacking. I spent a memorable evening in Rose Canyon a few years ago staying awake until 4 a.m. reading David Morrell's 'The Brotherhood of the Rose.' Bad idea.
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azbackpackrGuides: 27 | Official Routes: 23Triplogs Last: 78 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 771 d
- Joined: Jan 21 2006 6:46 am
- City, State: Eagar AZ
Re: favorite trail reading material?
I like that series, A Walk Across America. There are three books, I think, or maybe just two, but Peter Jenkins went on to write other books, one about China. He also got into doing technical climbing in TREES in the Southeast, maybe Georgia or Tennessee, where he eventually settled. I think the second book in the series is called "The Walk West." Yeah, just two books. He got married at some point and continued the walk with his wife, as I recall.
Another person who had a life-changing experience like that was Robin Graham. He wrote "Dove," a tale about sailing solo around the world. It took him about 5 years, and he also got married along the way. Great book--especially since as I recall he was only about 14 or 16 or so when he began his solo sail from California across the Pacific. Unfortunately, Robin Graham was killed later on, after he had built a cabin in Montana and settled there with his wife, he was killed in a motorcycle crash.
Another person who had a life-changing experience like that was Robin Graham. He wrote "Dove," a tale about sailing solo around the world. It took him about 5 years, and he also got married along the way. Great book--especially since as I recall he was only about 14 or 16 or so when he began his solo sail from California across the Pacific. Unfortunately, Robin Graham was killed later on, after he had built a cabin in Montana and settled there with his wife, he was killed in a motorcycle crash.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
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fairweather8588Guides: 1 | Official Routes: 0Triplogs Last: 471 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
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Re: favorite trail reading material?
I could probably count on my hand the number of times I've brought a book on a backpack in the last 6-7 years, but it'd either be a Ed Abbey or a WWII paperback (history major, if I ever feel like graduating)
No man should go through life without once experiencing healthy, even bored solitude in the wilderness, finding himself depending solely on himself and thereby learning his true and hidden strength
Kerouac
Kerouac
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azbackpackrGuides: 27 | Official Routes: 23Triplogs Last: 78 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 771 d
- Joined: Jan 21 2006 6:46 am
- City, State: Eagar AZ
Re: favorite trail reading material?
It doesn't matter where I am, I usually have something to read in my bag.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes

