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Walking Home: A Woman's Pilgrimage on the Appalachian Trail
 
 
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Walking Home: A Woman's Pilgrimage on the Appalachian Trail [Paperback]

Kelly Winters (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Official Guides to the Appalachian Trail September 1, 2001

The Appalachian Trail stretches from Georgia to Maine, a grueling 2,000-mile journey marked by white blazes that doggedly lead to the summit of every mountain in its path. For hikers, it represents a pilgrimage to the very heart of outdoor culture. For Kelly Winters, it was that and more. "I felt there was a place I needed to get to," she writes, "not a physical place, but an emotional, psychological, spiritual one." So she quit her job, left behind an unhealthy relationship, and set foot on the trail, where for the next six months, as a member of a nomadic tribe of zealots, slackers, heiresses, stoners, saints, and freaks, overcoming exhaustion, hunger, injuries, and loneliness, she moved northward. Winters's account, in the tradition of our best outdoor chroniclers from John Muir to Jon Krakauer, captures the sense of both majestic isolation and quirky community, the moments of staggering beauty and of startling terror, and the conflicting senses of exhilaration and futility that exist in outdoor adventure. But, most vividly, Walking Home is an exceptionally truthful, often funny, exciting account of an emotional and spiritual journey filled with courage, healing, developing trust, unexpected strength, and most surprisingly, lasting love.

Features:

8 page photo insert

Marketing Plans:

Advance Reader Copies. Awareness campaign to hiking and outdoor clubs. Outdoor media push including Outside Magazine , Backpacker , National Geographic Adventure . Other media including Fresh Air, NPR's, Morning Edition, Ms. Magazine, SI for Women, Femsport, O The Oprah Magazine.

Kelly Winters is a freelance writer and editor living in Bayville, N.Y. She is the author of Along Long Island, published by Side Roads Press. An excerpt of Walking Home appeared in A Woman's Path: Women's Best Spiritual Travel Writing, published by Travelers' Tales Inc.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

art outdoor adventure tale, part feminist empowerment treatise and part plain old gripping read, Winters's story of hiking the Appalachian Trail ably conjures the smell of pine and the taste of cold oatmeal. After a difficult breakup with her boyfriend, Winters (Side Roads of Long Island) decided to fulfill a lifelong dream of hiking the blazed path alone. When she starts her six-month trip in Georgia, her will is strong, but her thoughts are confused; she keeps hoping that the 2,000-mile hike will clear her head. It does, eventually, but it's a sometimes grueling journey, physically and emotionally. Yet the book doesn't merely chart the interior journey of a bisexual woman on the rebound. Winters relates her many encounters with lack of food, rain, bad knees, the nuances of hiker shelter etiquette, and in off-trail hostels, making this a lively if at times rambling and tediously detailed story of self-reliance. She also evokes the unique culture of the "thruhikers" (those who undertake walking the entire trail uninterruptedly), who track each other through logs at shelters and tend to meet up along the way, sometimes walking together for days or weeks at a time. Written with honesty and wry insight, Winters's account will appeal most to sporty women who enjoy a rousing tale of emotional triumph.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Blackened toenails, swollen fingers, salamanders in the water supply, mice in the shelters, trails that go up or down and are rarely level, rain, rain, and more rain these are but a few of the physical discomforts endemic to hiking the Appalachian Trail. Add to this a bizarre subculture created by dedicated "thruhikers" that includes choosing unusual, evocative trail names (Winters herself becomes "Amazin' Grace") and the scene is set for what many would consider "a walk on the wild side." Bill Bryson had more fun with the subject in his A Walk in the Woods, though he was criticized by many for his irreverent attitude. Winters (Side Roads of Long Island), who took six months to hike the 2000 miles from Georgia to Maine, chose a different path: her mission was to search for the self and to (re)define her sexuality. The result is an uneven, facile travel memoir at once laden with superfluous and often sordid details of a love affair gone wrong and the author's impressive knowledge of the region's flora and fauna. Recommended for extensive adventure collections in large public libraries; also appropriate for lesbian literature collections. Janet Ross, formerly with Sparks Branch Lib., NV
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Alyson Books; 1 edition (September 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1555836585
  • ISBN-13: 978-1555836580
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #497,520 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

32 Reviews
5 star:
 (20)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (32 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not for purists., April 15, 2002
By 
This review is from: Walking Home: A Woman's Pilgrimage on the Appalachian Trail (Paperback)
If you are looking for a book about the Appalachian Trail itself, there are much better books out there. However, if you want a book about the hiking experience and the people one meets out on the trail, this is the book for you. Like many of the hikers I met on the AT, Winters is propelled onto the trail by loss (e.g., the death of her father, a love relationship that went way wrong), and the consequent desire to locate home. (Hence, the title.) I have not read a more observant, telling, articulate narrative of long distance hiking. Purists might sniff at her rainbow blazing habits and the fact that she didn't finish the trail, but few will dismiss this book as insignificant. It is, in fact, a gem.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A terrific book, September 23, 2002
This review is from: Walking Home: A Woman's Pilgrimage on the Appalachian Trail (Paperback)
I didn't expect to like this book as much as I did, since many adventure travel stories are strong on content but weak on execution. I was pleasantly surpised, then, to find that Kelly Winters can really write. Walking Home was so engrossing that I couldn't put it down. I read it in one sitting.

I'm not a hiker myself, just someone enthralled by the idea of undertaking a physical and mental challenge like the AT. I've read a lot of the Trail books and to me this is the best all-around entry. It has all the color and detail that makes you feel like you're there but it also places the quest in a bigger, more meaningful context. Highly recommended.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The real deal, February 9, 2005
This review is from: Walking Home: A Woman's Pilgrimage on the Appalachian Trail (Paperback)
Many AT thru hikers claim that Bill Bryson's A Walk In The Woods inspired them to hike the trail. Personally I don't see how a book written by a man that hiked only small sections of the trail and didn't bond with the trail's culture could do this.
Kelly Winter's is the real deal. She hiked all the way, in one stretch from Georgia to Maine. She talks about the high points as well as the low points without sounding overly mushy or whiny - something all too common in books about thru hikes.
The opening pages about her strange boyfriend had me worried that the book would contain mostly personal stories and not much trail information. Thankfully this sidetrack was neccesarry because it told the reader where she was in her life and why she chose to hike. The rest of the book is a great description of the trail, the people and animals, and the thoughts in her head.
This is the story that should inspire people to hike the AT.
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First Sentence:
"As soon as I'm old enough to walk, my father teaches me how to ski." Read the first page
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Red Hot, Ronsonol Man, Dough Boy, Spider Man, Anna Banana, Maine Event, Aunt Bee, Dances With Mice, North Carolina, New York, Chocolate Chip, Hot Springs, Steamroller Boy, Noodle Boot, Little Star, Marmalade Cat, Army Jack, Fontana Dam, Georgia Dan, Scooby Doo, Springer Mountain, Boxcar Willie, Great Barrington, Speedy Slug, Swiss Army
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