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On Trails
On Trails: An Exploration | Robert Moor
From a brilliant new literary voice comes a groundbreaking exploration of how trails help us understand the worldfrom tiny ant trails to hiking paths that span continents, from interstate highways to the Internet. In 2009, while thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail, Robert Moor began to wonder about the paths that lie beneath our feet: How do they form? Why do some improve over time while others devolve? What makes us follow or strike off on our own? Over the course of the next seven years, Moor traveled the globe, exploring trails of all kinds, from the miniscule to the massive. He learned the tricks of master trail-builders, hunted down long-lost Cherokee trails, and traced the origins of our road networks and the Internet. In each chapter, Moor interweaves his adventures with findings from science, history, philosophy, and nature writingcombining the nomadic joys of Peter Matthiessen with the eclectic wisdom of Lewis Hydes The Gift. Throughout, Moor reveals how this single topicthe oft-overlooked trailsheds new light on a wealth of age-old questions: How does order emerge out of chaos? How did animals first crawl forth from the seas and spread across continents? How has humanitys relationship with nature and technology shaped world around us? And, ultimately, how does each of us pick a path through life? Moor has the essayists gift for making new connections, the adventurers love for paths untaken, and the philosophers knack for asking big questions. With a breathtaking arc that spans from the dawn of animal life to the digital era, On Trails is a book that makes us see our world, our history, our species, and our ways of life anew.
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Jess
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My husband surprised me with this amazing vintage Peanuts seance puzzle. Got a little more into my audiobook while putting this one together.

TheNeverendingTBR Puzzles!! 😃 4y
17 likes1 comment
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JSW
Pickpick

Fascinating discourse about trails, from multiple perspectives. Reminiscent of Susan Orlean's work. A must read for serious walkers.

Joanne1 You might like another book I read recently 4y
JSW @Joanne1 thank you! That sounds really good!!! 4y
18 likes2 comments
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RogueMusings
Mehso-so

One from Husband and I's private bookclub. Both hikers so it fit. Definitely supplied us with many interesting conversation topics such as the importance of animal research to advancing technology and using a hobby to bring nations together. Sometimes it felt like the author wanted to tell about his (justifiably) interesting experiences that didn't quite feel like they belonged. Good book - but needs a certain person with a certain mindset.

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RogueMusings

“From trains to automobiles to airplanes, each time the speed of connection quickens, travelers have expressed a sense of growing alienation from the land blurring past our windows. In the same vein, many people currently worry that digital technology is making us less connected to the people and things in our immediate environment.“ -Moor

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RogueMusings
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Reading this with my husband. Both of us are climbers and hikers so we're excited for the new perspective this book will give us while out on the trails. #currentlyreading

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plemmdog
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Pickpick

There are some nonfiction writers you pick up and within minutes, the passion they carry for their subject feels like lightning in a bottle. Less than five pages in, I found myself wondering how come I‘ve never heard of Robert Moor? Inspired by a thru-hike completed in his twenties on the Appalachian Trail, Moor finds himself wondering about the existence and evolution of trails (animal as well as human). LOVED THIS.

6 likes1 stack add
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Lauram
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I‘ve always been fascinated by trails and people that complete thru-hikes. I‘m looking forward to this book!

Nevermore88 I live close by it 5y
Toniyesss I loved this book! I found it so interesting to see how trails are formed, and when I hike I have a new appreciation for the trail itself 5y
68 likes4 stack adds3 comments
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N8ure
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22 likes1 stack add
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Danherrington
Pickpick

👍

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N8ure
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All things optimize in nature, to some degree

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Hamlet
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Pickpick

Moor is an erudite fellow. I quite enjoyed this book: an intellectual trek on the heels of my PCT trek of 2017. He mulls trails of all kinds across cultures, species, & time. He piqued my curiosity regularly so that I made a related TBR list. The interweaving of his own journeys with his research was well done. Moor‘s book is thought-provoking, though I lost some steam as he waxed philosophic at the end. It‘s a pleasurable & satisfying read.

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MrBook
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#TBRtemptation post 4! I love this cover! I should get this one since we live in a national forest and are surrounded by a plethora of trails 😊. This is a reflective, philosophical study asking fundamental questions, such as: how does order emerge; how did animals come from the seas and spread out on land; how has man's relationship with nature and technology changed; how do we pick our own path? #blameLitsy #blameMrBook 😎

KimHM I definitely need to get back to this. Thanks for the reminder 😊 7y
Lindy I enjoyed this one. 👍 7y
75 likes7 stack adds2 comments
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mrldg
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"The history of life on this planet can be seen as a single path made in the walking of it. We are all the inheritors of that line, but also its pioneers. Every step, we push forward into the unknown, following the path, and leaving a trail."

7 likes1 stack add
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KimHM
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Much of my reading right now is history heavy and abstract, so I needed something comforting.📖❤️

vivastory I love this quote 7y
3 likes1 comment
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Jeremiahfair
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Thanks for the recommendation Liberty!

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lauralovesbooks1
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Pickpick

Interesting look at trails of all kinds -- From the trails that insects follow to the Appalachian Trail and onto the information highway. Moor explores both the physical nature of trails as well as their impact on society. Themes about connection and separation run throughout the book

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lauralovesbooks1
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"It got easier-- or rather, I got tougher." -- There is a world of wisdom in that short quote.

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kerry
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Pickpick

I first read Robert Moor's book last year and highly, highly recommend. After visiting the AT this weekend for the first time, I'm even more intrigued by his experiences through-hiking and studying the many ways trails connect us to each other--and the world. This is narrative nonfiction at its finest, and one I'm excited to revisit.

20 likes2 stack adds
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Endrilkay
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This is me reading away the stress of attempting to make a decision on graduate school... do I go to this deaf ed program or decline and spend the next year preparing to study/take the GRE and applying to a speech-language pathology programs? Could someone make the decision for me? No? Ok, I will just read instead... maybe it will all go away and resolve itself!

4 likes1 stack add
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Endrilkay
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Been a bit of a slow start, but loving the concept of this book so far.

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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

With hiking and the Appalachian Trail as a jumping off point, the author explores trails made by current and historic humans as well as those made by animals. About half the book discussed animal trails, which I found to be the most interesting parts. Interesting and enlightening. (And I hate daylight savings time--it's made me stay up far too late!)

AnnieReads Oh, that pup looks so relaxed!! 7y
70 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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TheBooktrovert
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My motivational books have arrived! #OnTrails #TheHourofLand #findyourpark #hiking #backpacking

youngreadrshelf Curious to hear what you think of these. 7y
7 likes1 comment
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CAGirlReading
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#outside #riotgrams Spent lots of time outdoors this weekend hiking and checking out these guys! 😄 Happy to have a nice sunny weekend after all the rain!

britt_brooke Beautiful! 7y
JenP Beautiful photo 7y
See All 12 Comments
LauraBeth Gorgeous photo! 7y
SusanInTiburon Ah, the sweet smell of sea lions sunbathing by the seashore! 🐚 7y
MyNamesParadise I just think of the sea lions from Finding Dory 😊😊😊 7y
JSW You must be in my neck of the woods! I'm in Santa Cruz. 7y
Cinfhen Wow😍 7y
CAGirlReading @JSW I was! This was just up the coast but I stayed overnight in Santa Cruz😄 7y
JSW 👋🏻👋🏻👋🏻 7y
161 likes1 stack add12 comments
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Lindy
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Did you know that slime mould can arrive at the same route-efficiency results as transportation engineers?

[P.S. Photo is of art. If you want to see slime mould, go google it.]

31 likes1 stack add
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Lindy
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Pickpick

Environmental journalism, contemplative & wide-ranging. Understanding how humans interact with landscape & how social organization relies on physical ways to connect, from ancient pathways to contemporary long-distance hiking to Internet networks. Fascinating #audiobook.

43 likes3 stack adds
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Lindy
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On wild land, wild thoughts can flourish. There, we can feel all the ragged edges of what we do not know and we can make room for other living things to live differently. We must learn to infuse this sense of the wild back into the human landscape. For instance, to see even the trees in our backyards as wild things, and to reframe our understanding of the wilderness so that it can contain us within it.

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Lindy
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Today's audiobook:
"From the 3rd grade on, I burned through books the way a chain-smoker smokes, picking up one even as I was extinguishing the last."
Happy #24in48 to those of you participating.

40 likes1 stack add
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JessFerg
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I love all your adorable composed pics where the book is perfectly highlighted with your cute little tea and coffee cups while I'm over here with a dirty lens drinking beer and trying to figure out how the hell to properly crop a picture. Long story short: Happy New Year! (PS - On Trails is absolutely addictive reading - so many facts wending their way to the same place. Fascinating.)

1 like1 stack add
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bio_chem06
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Have an eclectic group of books to finish out the year. I always make a goal of 52 books a year, no less. This year got away from me, so I opted for some shorter books that I've been putting off to help me reach that 52. On with my 2016 reading journey!
#almost2017

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eclecticreading
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Bailedbailed

The concept of this book sounded interesting but after reading the prologue and parts of chapter one, I realised this book just isn't for me. I'd rather walk the trail than read about it...

insanitysandwich Love the cover though! 8y
eclecticreading @insanitysandwich It's a classy cover, I admit 😄 7y
11 likes2 comments
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Hoopiefoot
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This book should come with the warning: "Caution: This book will make you want to head immediately to the nearest trail. Do not listen on your way to work or when you otherwise need to be responsible."

33 likes1 stack add
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JoshCook
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One day, when I have all the time in the world, I'd love to write a book like this, that takes a relatively basic idea & follows it wherever it leads.

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Kkhalifeh
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I'm wearing my "trails" shirt and look what I got today!

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BethFishReads
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Few Americans can say with any certainty that they have seen an old Indian trail. But almost everyone has seen the ghost of one and even traveled along it.

Humanatea I travelled the Natchez Trace all the time when I was young, and once saw a remnant of the old trails it grew from! 8y
34 likes1 stack add1 comment
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simonbooks
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"In bewildering times - when all the old ways seem to be dissolving into mire - it serves us well to turn our eyes earthward and study the oft-overlooked wisdom beneath our feet."

BethFishReads I featured this book on blog the other day! 8y
MrBook Nice pic! Love that spot 😊. 8y
14 likes1 stack add2 comments