Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2017 Challenge prompts
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A book set in the wilderness
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Elizabeth
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Dec 19, 2016 10:21AM

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I love Desert Solitaire....I read it first in my twenties and then again in my thirties and I never re-read books. I loved my visit to Moab.....it is so beautiful and somewhere I would love to visit again.

This was a very good read! - Girl in the Woods: A Memoir

The Snow Child
The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon
The Red Tent
The Light Between Oceans
Station Eleven
The Lifeboat
Kim wrote: "I'm thinking
The Snow Child
The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon
The Red Tent
The Light Between Oceans
Station Eleven
[book:The..."
I've read three of those. I absolutely LOVED Station Eleven, it is one of my all-time favorite books, and while it is set in a post-apocalyptic future where much of today's civilization has broken down, I wouldn't exactly describe it as taking place in the wilderness.
The Red Tent was another great book that I don't think was set in wilderness, it was just set in the past.
The Snow Child was a great book and I would recommend it for this category!
The Snow Child
The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon
The Red Tent
The Light Between Oceans
Station Eleven
[book:The..."
I've read three of those. I absolutely LOVED Station Eleven, it is one of my all-time favorite books, and while it is set in a post-apocalyptic future where much of today's civilization has broken down, I wouldn't exactly describe it as taking place in the wilderness.
The Red Tent was another great book that I don't think was set in wilderness, it was just set in the past.
The Snow Child was a great book and I would recommend it for this category!

Also I picked up "A Lantern in Her Hand on Kindle for just 99 cents.

Tisha: The Wonderful True Love Story of a Young Teacher in the Alaskan Wilderness & [book:A Schoolteac..."
Tisha is fantastic. I haven't read it in years but I'm thinking of reading it again for this prompt! Or possibly Into the Wilderness by Sara Donati

Tisha: The Wonderful True Love Story of a Young Teacher in the Alaskan Wilderness & [b..."
If you enjoyed Tisha, then you might really like Mrs. Mike.

If you like YA, Hatchet, Julie of the Wolves, or Island of the Blue Dolphins could also work.
I haven't read it yet, but I got The Mountain Between Us for Christmas and think it might work for this category as well. The blurb says it involves two people and a dog trying to survive in the wildernesss after a plane crash.

I read it earlier this year. It is a fabulous book! I highly recommend it!

Living in Finland wi..."
My maternal grandfather was from Finland and a trip there is the number one item on my mother's bucket list. We're going this summer so setting the mood with some Finnish literature would totally be welcome in any category. Love the suggestions.

Sheri wrote: "Would a book that takes place in Antartica count? I'm thinking of reading Endurance, which my friends assure me is great."
Yes, I think Antarctica counts as wilderness!
Yes, I think Antarctica counts as wilderness!

If anyone is looking for a memoir, Anne LaBastille seems like an interesting person (I guess her journals would work for "interesting woman" too!), she wrote several books about the Adirondacks. I haven't read anything by her, but I keep meaning to.
Woodswoman I: Living Alone in the Adirondack Wilderness
Woodswoman I: Living Alone in the Adirondack Wilderness

This book is excellent, and yes, I would consider it to be wilderness. I just read it recently and it took a long time for me to leave people behind. I still haven't completely.

Juanita wrote: "I was thinking of A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail for this one but now I might read Lord of the Flies, which is on 100 books everyone sho..."
ooh I love lists, and I was getting excited by that one because I've read most of the books! and then my bubble deflated into sad face at #46: "The Holy Bible: King James Version" No. Just no. Why do all these "everyone must read" lists insist on including the Bible??? The Bible should be read by Christians. For the rest of us, a passing familiarity with the highlights is sufficient. //end rant.
ooh I love lists, and I was getting excited by that one because I've read most of the books! and then my bubble deflated into sad face at #46: "The Holy Bible: King James Version" No. Just no. Why do all these "everyone must read" lists insist on including the Bible??? The Bible should be read by Christians. For the rest of us, a passing familiarity with the highlights is sufficient. //end rant.

Definitely. The Amazon basin is very much the wilderness.


It is December of 1792. Elizabeth Middleton leaves her comfortable English estate to join her family in a remote New York mountain village. It is a place unlike any she has ever experienced. And she meets a man unlike any she has ever encountered - a white man dressed like a Native American, Nathanial Booner, known to the Mohawk people as Between-Two-Lives. Determined to provide schooling for all the children of the village, she soons finds herself locked in conflict with the local slave owners as well as her own family.
Interweaving the fate of the Mohawk Nation with the destiny of two lovers, Sara Donati's compelling novel creates a complex, profound, passionate portrait of an emerging America

Living in Finland wi..."
Oh, that reminds me, Birdbrain is also a Finnish book about wilderness, but it takes place in Australia. I'd recommend it for this.


You might be interested in The Year of the Hare. Not sure if it's Paasilinna's best novel but it's probably the most translated and is even one of the books in the Boxall's list of 1001 Books to read before you die. The protagonist leaves everything and follows a hare into the woods, so it would fit this category.
Currently I am reading nonfiction where the men are living in the nature somewhere between Viborg and Leningrad. They know the area well because they grew up there but now they are walking armed in the enemy territory. (And now I am watching a documentary about the Finnish tourism to the Soviet Union that started in the 1950's. Then when the male tourists had to write down the last time they visited the country, many of the older ones had to lie... :D)

The Light Between Oceans
Station Eleven"
I'm not sure about The Light Between Oceans. They are the only people on the island, but is it really the wilderness?

Definitely! Good book!



Fascinating book about the "Grizzly Man" from Werner Herzog's film, who lived among Alaska Bears and was killed by them.
Not only does it try to understand why Treadwell engaged in such risky behavior, but It also provides a lot of information about bears and their behavior. If you are interested in this kind of thing, I recommend.


I've been meaning to read Touching Spirit Bear for years, and I think that's my selection for this prompt.


Plus, as others have said in other threads, this is your challenge. We're not competing for a prize, and there are no judges evaluating your selections. If you want to finish the book, do it, and file it under "wilderness." :)

Also I picked up "A Lantern in Her Hand on..."
I had a copy of A Lantern in Her Hand when I was young, probably the adolescent-early teen years, and I read it a zillion times! I never would have thought of it as a "wilderness" book, but the definition is flexible and at the time of the book, those midwestern states were wilderness, at least to the early homesteaders. I have this on a list of books I'd like to reread someday, so I'm glad you brought it up and tickled my memory.

The Snow Child
The Mountain Between Us
Into the Wild
Challenger Deep
Our Endless Numbered Days
Thoughts?

The Snow Child
The Mountain Between Us
Into the Wild
Challenger Deep
[book:Our Endless Numbered ..."
Snow Child and Into the Wild definitely work. Not sure about the others.
Books mentioned in this topic
Lumberjanes: Up All Night (other topics)What We See in the Stars: An Illustrated Tour of the Night Sky (other topics)
Ancestor (other topics)
Once Upon a River (other topics)
Walden: Life in the Woods (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Gene Stratton-Porter (other topics)Michael Finkel (other topics)
Tracy Chevalier (other topics)
Conrad Richter (other topics)
Michael Finkel (other topics)
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