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A Field Guide to the Subterranean: Reclaiming the Deep Earth and our Deepest Selves

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A radically inventive excavation of one man’s life and our relationship to the earth, by the critically acclaimed author of The Great Floodgates of the Wonderworld.

Justin Hocking grew up in a part of Colorado where many things happened beneath the surface—mining exploits, underground nuclear testing just thirty miles from his family’s home, and geothermal activity that heats one of the world’s largest hot spring pools. His homelife, too, was plagued by hidden patterns of abuse and virulent masculinity. A Field Guide to the Subterranean charts the author’s lifelong process of unearthing the past to reclaim his own identity and connection to the natural world.

How might we transform our traumas into deeper care for one another and the landscapes that sustain us? How do we transcend the mythos of the rugged American male so rooted in extraction and exploitation? And how far can we move beyond the self in a memoir? Hocking explores these and other vital questions by combining his own personal introspection with expansive narratives that examine geology, ecology, gender theory, mining history, labor rights, and even skateboarding.

Abundant with historical research and teeming with birdlife—and ranging in location from remote caves and mountains to secluded surf breaks in Costa Rica—A Field Guide to the Subterranean heralds a boldly original and kaleidoscopic approach to the genre of both memoir and nature writing.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published June 10, 2025

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Justin Hocking

29 books14 followers

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Jesen.
10 reviews
September 26, 2025
fascinating fascinating fascinating. love the combo prose-essay
1 review
February 28, 2026
I admit, I thought this book was about spelunking when I picked it up from my local library. I committed the classic sin of judging a book by its cover and not paying close enough attention to the tiny words on its upper right: a memoir. So I went into this book expecting tight passageways, cave paintings, mining disasters, and blind/translucent animals. I was very confused at the start as we got more personal than expected and spent more time digging down mentally rather than physically. Still, I was committed at this point, and I stayed along for the ride, sometimes on the author's surfboard, skateboard, or hike. It wasn't bad. While it may not be a guide to safely spelunking, if you're looking to descend into your own dark thoughts and confront the creepy crawlies inside, sign up for Justin Hocking's tour.
Profile Image for tonia peckover.
794 reviews21 followers
September 5, 2025
(all books get 5 stars) This book is as much about the form as it is the writing. Hocking uses a braided narrative technique that allows him to tell his story in short, nonlinear fragments. This form echoes his use of mining as a metaphor and framework. It is as if he is going underground and bringing up memories and connections and laying them out for us to see. All these fragments are connected, all originating from the same source - one that affects Hocking culturally and personally - but this is not obvious at first. He seems to want our patience. Here is a nugget, here is another, here is one more, do you see the connection? Reading it, I was struck with how honest this approach can be, as opposed to a more familiar linear narrative where the writer has ordered and deciphered the story for the reader. Hocking has ordered his too, of course, but the fragmentation and the frequent disruption of the time line ask the reader to see patterns instead of conclusions. It's in keeping with Hocking's own self-questioning style in which he recalls his memory, analyzes it, then stops and thinks again about the underlying stories, the fragments he has not yet discovered or brought into the light. A lovely book that is not only memoir but cultural critique and nature writing as well.
Profile Image for Shilo.
Author 23 books71 followers
November 3, 2025
I was seriously enthralled by A Field Guide to the Subterranean and read through it, sometimes aloud to my partner in less than a week which is hard to do when you're teaching 4 comp classes. The combination of personal insight was juxtaposed against a deep and rough history of mining in Colorado in areas that we just visited and drove through. And learning about the miners wars against the barons of the time was captivating. Utterly fascinating. I'll be keeping and recommending this one for a long time into the future.
Profile Image for April Alexis Hernandez.
Author 12 books2 followers
September 6, 2025
Writing a memoir like this takes guts and a willingness to be so vulnerable, and Justin really knocked it out of the park. Once I started reading, I couldn't put it down.

I truly feel so honored to have been one of the students in the memoir writing class that is referenced towards the end of the book. I always think fondly of that class, and I thank Justin for encouraging us all to try to be vulnerable in our own writing as well. I am a better writer because of him.
Profile Image for Naava Guaraca.
32 reviews6 followers
October 31, 2025
4.5 probably, I absolutely devoured this. It’s all I did today. I haven’t been so captivated by a book in months and god does it feel good.

So much of this resonated with me, particularly the parts about mental health.. I feel like this book found me at the exact right moment. Loved the way each chapter/fragment felt like its own individual world, even when it was the continuation of a longer narrative component. I learned so much and looked up all the birds and now I want to go to costa rica
Profile Image for Jonathan.
1 review
October 30, 2025
Justin Hocking's powerful new memoir traces what he has described as a Dante-esque path patterned, in overarching structure, on "The Divine Comedy." On the way, he grapples with demons both personal and cultural, inviting readers along on his deeply insightful journey from subterranean Inferno to sky-opening Paradise.
Profile Image for Peter Rock.
Author 32 books339 followers
June 24, 2025
Can "paradise" only ever exist in the imagination? If so, what critical omissions or substitutions perpetuate the fantasy?
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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