ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Backpacking/Outdoors Experience Books

"What if I fell in a forest:
Would a tree hear?"
--Annie Dillard--

 

 

  • A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail by Bill Bryson: Broadway Books, New York; 1998; 276 pages.

    The author, after returning to America following 20 years in England, discovered a path which led from his New Hampshire town to the Appalachian Trail, and decided to walk it, so along with his hiking buddy, Katz, they did 870 miles, or 39.5% of the trail. He entertainingly and lightheartedly describes the bewildering and comical characters they met and experiences they encountered. He is unafraid to dispense criticism where appropriate, be it at the U. S. Forest Service, The National Park Service, The Army Corps of Engineers, himself, Katz, Henry David Thoreau, or the nature of Americans in general. Bryson is a master researcher (no doubt the journalist in him) and extemporizes on the history of the trail or a town or a coal mine, and also intersperses geology, philosophy, psychology, the effects of the Ice Age, the plumbing system of a tree, and much more. He has been criticized for not being a true backpacker, not following Leave No Trace guidelines, and overemphasizing the dangers inherent in wilderness adventure (all thoroughly researched) -- and all are in the book -- but the entertainment value of this knee-slapping, laugh-out-loud treatise is its true purpose for readers, not to serve as a "how-to" book.