Wandering Home: A Long Walk Across America's Most Hopeful Landsca
M**S
Review of Bill McKibben's "Wandering Home"
Bill McKibben walks for sixteen days through the Adirondack Mountains to share his love of the land with his readers but what makes the book so special are the people Bill introduces, walks with, and talks with (and about...) along his journey. I was a Travel Agent for five years and was lucky enough to be sent to some of the best, first class places in America and this journey that Bill McKibben takes us on with his words is more meaningful than many of those places I went to which include the Grand Canyon & Scottsdale, AZ; the San Francisco Bay Area; Paradise Island & Nassau, Bahamas; Manhattan; the Sierra-Nevada Mountains (by train); and New Orleans & Mississippi River Cruise!Each authentic and real person that McKibben joins on his trek lends a hand in telling the story. The book is as much about the beauty of the people as it is of the land. I grew up twenty miles away from the Allegheny National Forest in Pennsylvania, and presently I am a steward and guardian of 400 acres of land in central PA with my husband, his uncle, and my husband's brother and I share and appreciate Bill McKibben's deep love for the power of nature, the wild, and the people. I found John Davis (owns a bicycle, no car) as one of the most interesting characters in the book. I also like the stories of Chris Shaw, who has the good sense of memorializing the people who have passed on but that once lived in the Adirondacks and give the book historical authenticity. My favorite stories in the book are from Donald Armstrong and especially Armstrong's memory he shares with McKibben (and us) about Don's wife, Velda and a fly-fishing event. I laughed so hard I cried! It is a funny moment, but this husband-wife story is so cute and sweet, and gives one a feeling of nostalgia. (The church steeple is a cool part, too.) This is a gem of a story and Wandering Home is a gem of a book.I am a people person and for the first few chapters of Wandering Home I'm thinking that it is too bad Bill McKibben spends all this passion on the Adirondacks. I imagine what his passion could do to improve the lives of the infirm or impoverished people. Much to my chagrin, in the last few chapters McKibben admits this deficit with charm and honesty. He admits he should spend more time helping the less fortunate, and then justifies his love and preservation of the Adirondacks as his way of giving something back to people. And, I agree that he has. Furthermore, he explains that he tries not to be a drain on the planet. If only we could all think this way, maybe our global warming and environmental problems would vanish. For the first time in my life, I realize the full extent of the impact that people have had and still have on our surroundings and I am saddened and sickened by it. (I imagine a sunrise or a sunset over a mountain, or an ocean breeze I thank God there are still a few areas left in this world that man / woman hasn't been able to get his / her hands on.)I do have one eco-criticism of Wandering Home. Bill writes that he and John Davis climb to the top of Owl's Head on page 93 of his book. Owl's Head is a considerable distance away from Bristol, and is not included in the path outlined on the inside covers of his book. But, every author has to create mystery in some way, right? Judging by the description of Owl's Head I can see why McKibben would include it in his "walk" since Owl's Head sounds like a stunning place with it's 390 degree view of the Adirondack mountains. On my map, Owl's Head is about sixty miles north of Lake Placid one way, as the crow flies.Dr. Robert Bernard Hass (English Professor, poet, writer, and Robert Frost expert at Edinboro University) and I got into a discussion about hyper-individualism in class one day. Dr. Hass told me about his friend named Bill McKibben and how McKibben writes about hyper-individualism and that a good place to start on the subject would be Wandering Home. I am grateful that Hass recommended the book to me. It was a book that I was sad to see end, but a journey I will always remember in more ways than one. I was so inspired that I am planning on a short family vacation to the Adirondacks for this summer. I will do my best to demonstrate a sense of forest preservation and protection while I'm there, visiting the wild of the Adirondacks.
R**L
An Intriguing Premise
I much enjoyed McKibben's account of a hike from Vermont to the Adirondacks, and am intrigued by the "most hopeful landscape" premise. I was a bit disappointed with his failure to more fully develop the theme, particularly in the Adirondacks where the experiment is still playing out. I agree with the premise that the Adirondacks is a hopeful landscape, and was looking McKibben to provide more explicit confirmation of that belief. That said, I hope that everyone who cares about the region will read the book.
L**K
An excellent follow-up to End of Nature which I found to ...
An excellent follow-up to End of Nature which I found to be depressing and flirting with becoming a science text book. Wandering Home is personal, realistic, hopeful & enlightening in its depth and balance. Of particular interest is its practicality without being utilitarian, McKibben does an artful job of discussing nuance and balance in the complicated journey of living lightly, even wildly, in our current world. Impractical starry-eyed ideology is replaced with hopeful reality with an eye on a brighter future and a wilder landscape.
R**E
A good place for a novice environmentalist to start reading
I appreciate the values of the farmers and homesteaders sprinkled liberally throughout this enjoyable book. Descriptions of hiking areas were especially interesting!
A**A
Up Close and Personal Description of Wilderness in Two Nearby States with Many Differences
Lots of fun to read about Bill McKibben's walk between his two homes across two different states -- I passed it on to a man who is relearning to walk again after a serious surgery.
B**S
Three Stars
Would have liked more hiking, less informing.
D**F
i loved it
After reading this slim book I felt like I'd gone hiking with McKibben. And I felt like moving to the areas he describes: Vermont and the Adirondacks.
M**N
Oasis of ecological/human sanity
Salve for the soul of those wounded by the spectacle of all the "wrong" ways of living on our planet.
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