North Finding my way while running the Appalachian Trail

Scott Jurek, 1973-

Book - 2018

An expert ultrarunner describes how he set out to break the speed record for the Appalachian Trail, a 2,189 mile journey that took an unforeseen physical and emotional toll, but also offered him unexpected rewards.

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Subjects
Genres
Nonfiction
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Scott Jurek, 1973- (author)
Other Authors
Jenny Jurek (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 292 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color), maps ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780316433792
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. Give and Take
  • Deep South
  • Chapter 2. Live What You Love
  • Chapter 3. Wabi Sabi Masterpiece
  • Chapter 4. This Is Who I Am, This Is What I Do
  • Chapter 5. Never Bet Against the Champ
  • Virginia
  • Chapter 6. It Never Always Gets Worse
  • Chapter 7. Southern Hospitality
  • Chapter 8. Nickels and Dimes
  • Mid-Atlantic
  • Chapter 9. Rocksylvania
  • Chapter 10. Running Through the Sticks with My Woes
  • New England
  • Chapter 11. Nasty
  • Chapter 12. Vermud
  • Chapter 13. Special Forces
  • Maine
  • Chapter 14. Dancing with the Genie
  • Chapter 15. The Hundred-Mile Nightmare
  • Chapter 16. Down to the Wire
  • Chapter 17. The Greatest Mountain
  • Epilogue
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ultramarathoner Jurek (Eat & Run) shares the grueling story of his quest to run the Appalachian Trail¿¿2,189 miles while climbing and descending a million vertical feet¿¿faster than anyone before him. Much of the power in Jurek¿s writing comes from his honesty about his limitations and how his expectations have changed as he¿s aged: ¿I¿m forty and I need to feel what it¿s like to go to the edge again and go further.¿ As he moves north from Georgia to his destination in Maine over the course of six weeks, Jurek details the ¿tug-of-war between me and my younger self,¿ as he deals with fatigue, injury, hunger, and various well-wishers he meets on the way who often slow him down. His writing evokes the terrain: he feels as ¿free as the grassy fields rolling beneath me out to the Blue Ridge horizon¿; while running in stormy weather, he ¿ran into mud pits unlike anything I had ever seen.¿ His wife, Jenny, who accompanied him for the entire journey in a black cargo van converted into a ¿home on wheels,¿ contributes passages throughout. Jurek¿s exciting narrative presents the pain and joys of ultra-running at the end of a long and successful running career. (Apr.)

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