Opportunities to be transported around the world through the pages of a good read have been a balm for adventure seekers. And with so many great releases this year, we had some trouble narrowing down our list.听So we asked eight authors whose own books recently took us to incredible places to recommend some of their favorites. These titles听will sate you until it鈥檚 safe to travel again.
鈥楻辞肠办补飞补测鈥 by Diane Cardwell

According To: Bonnie Tsui, author of four books, including听 补苍诲听.
Bonnie Tsui, who examines the听draw humans have to water in her most recent听book,听Why We Swim, returns to a similar听theme in her recommended pick. In ,听Diane听Cardwell鈥檚 focus is on staying above water鈥攍iterally and figuratively鈥攁s she navigates a 鈥渇ailed marriage鈥 and fevered career. 鈥淭his book is all about starting over听and finding the thing鈥攕urfing!鈥攖hat transforms that life into something hopeful and new,鈥澨齌sui听says.听Through a physically challenging endeavor, Cardwell helps readers understand how she has weathered the storm and offers hope to others trying to do the same.听听
Why We Need This Now: In a year when the pandemic has added a layer of difficulty onto all of our lives, Rockaway听serves as a guidepost to survival and exploration in our own backyards. 鈥淒iane Cardwell鈥檚 experience of figuring out how to surf while living in New York City is a great read in a time when we are all desperately seeking newness closer to home. It also has a healthy dose of joy and altered perspective,鈥 Tsui adds.
鈥楲eave Only Footprints鈥 by Conor Knighton

According To:听Mark Adams, author of four books, including and .
鈥淓very human on earth is going to need a long vacation next year, which, if rosy vaccine forecasts come true, could be the greatest road-trip summer in decades. In this charming survey of dozens of national parks, Conor Knighton self-medicates a broken heart by soaking up the wonders of America鈥檚 greatest outdoor hits,鈥 explains Mark Adams, whose prolific travel writing career has included journeys that led him to听search for听the lost city of Atlantis 补苍诲听follow in听the footsteps of explorer Hiram Bingham III in the mountains of Peru.听
Why We Need This Now: For Adams, offers a worthy distraction from the exhausting news cycle we鈥檝e been faced with this year. 鈥淜nighton听will have you thinking about better uses for your pent-up energy. Like pitching a tent.鈥
鈥業 Hold a Wolf by the Ears: Stories鈥 by Laura Van Den Berg

According To: Morgan Jerkins, author of three books, including 听and .
One of Time鈥檚 100 Must-Read Books of 2020, Laura Van Den Berg鈥檚听 of female-focused horror stories may not seem like a travel narrative at first (unlike the writer鈥檚听previous novel, ) but Morgan Jerkins says the author鈥檚 deft portrayal of Florida is just one example of how it is. 鈥淔lorida is a character itself in the book. Van Den Berg deftly details the heat and nature听as well as the people. It鈥檚 very distinct, and I鈥檇 put her in the group of young esteemed writers like Alissa Nutting and T Kira Madden听who are carving out Florida as a necessary place in the literary canon,鈥 Jerkins says.
Why We Need This Now: According to Jerkins, Van Den Berg鈥檚 ability to explore complex female emotion and transport readers to each destination offers readers a timely salve. 鈥淚 think this is the perfect book about travel in 2020 because the author sets stories in different locations, both domestic and international, and the way in which she explores fear might be the sense of understanding we need in such an unprecedented time.鈥
鈥榃anderland: A Search for Magic in the Landscape鈥听by Jini Reddy

According To: Gina Rae La Cerva, author of .
In Jini Reddy鈥檚 memoir , the London-based Canadian writer takes a magical journey through her adopted home鈥檚 natural landscapes to cope with听feeling like an outsider. 鈥淪ometimes the best adventures happen in our backyards,鈥 Gina Rae La Cerva says.听鈥淩eddy follows her heart and a good dose of serendipity to explore Britain鈥檚 natural wonders. This book is a celebration of the joys of roaming and discovering who we are when we come face to face with nature鈥檚 mysteries.鈥
Why We Need This Now: La Cerva, whose own book is a world-spanning search of what foraging means to different cultures, understands how important connecting to nature is for our well-being. 鈥淔or many people, the lockdown has made escaping into the wilderness more challenging. Reddy shows us that even the most mundane landscapes contain their own wild magic. I also love that this book is about a woman of color exploring her connection to nature, including the role of her Hindu upbringing in that relationship and her own feeling of otherness.鈥
鈥楿nderland: A Deep Time Journey鈥听by Robert Macfarlane

According To: Tom Zoellner, author of eight nonfiction books, including and .
鈥淟ess a physical adventure than a startling intellectual journey, invites us to become conscious of a base fact of our everyday existence: the ground we stand on conceals unseen chthonic layers,鈥 says Tom Zoellner about Robert Macfarlane鈥檚 latest offering into underground spaces, which range from historic remnants, like nuclear waste burial chambers in Finland and the Paris Catacombs, to places that take us beyond easy听accessibility, like Norway鈥檚 sea caves.听鈥淢acfarlane is like John Wesley Powell without the suntan, taking us on a psychological spelunking odyssey,鈥澨齔oellner听adds.听
Why We Need This Now: As the world has seemingly shrunk during the pandemic, the idea of exploring our subterranean offerings gives a whole new meaning to appreciating our backyards. 鈥淢acfarlane gives us reasons to look deeper into pedestrian landscapes鈥攏ot just the picturesque ones鈥攁nd the language we use to make sense of them,鈥澨齔oellner听says.
鈥楽pirit Run: A 6,000-Mile Marathon听Through North America鈥檚 Stolen Land鈥听by No茅 Alvarez

According To: Maggie Shipstead, author of three books, including and the forthcoming (May听2021).
A quest for connection鈥攖o the land and his ancestors鈥攊s at the heart of the running journey that No茅 Alvarez takes readers on over the course of . 鈥淭he route [that Alvarez ran] was designed to pass through as many tribal lands as possible, and he found himself running alone on gravel roads or simple trails crossing through mountains, rainforest, punishing desert, volcanic moonscape, and sometimes urban centers, contemplating the relationship between Native peoples and the land taken from them,鈥 explains听Maggie Shipstead, whose own travelogue, set for release next May, also examines the connections forged on a journey across time (Prohibition through modern day) and place (America, New Zealand, and England).听
Why We Need This Now: 鈥淎lvarez is the child of Mexican migrants who endured decades of back-breaking labor [in Yakima, Washington] to make ends meet, and he weaves his parents鈥櫶齭tories into his account of the run, as well as those of the other [Indigenous] runners, many of whom have led crushingly difficult lives. For a lot of us, 2020 has been a year of grappling with the cruelties of the American system while also trying to make sense of mass suffering, and Alvarez鈥檚 memoir鈥攄eeply personal and moving in its rawness鈥攄oes both,鈥澨齋hipstead听says.
鈥楾he New Wilderness鈥听by Diane Cook听

According To: Rahawa Haile, author of the forthcoming 听(2022).
In her memoir about the Appalachian Trail,听set for release in 2021, Rahawa Haile shares her experience of finding herself anew in wild frontiers. Diane Cook鈥檚 does the same for its female protagonists who are fighting for their survival. 鈥The New Wilderness is a speculative novel involving a group of people who seek refuge in the last remaining wilderness when the air in the city is deemed too toxic for children,鈥 explains Haile about the buzzy dystopian debut. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an exhilarating and immersive work, centered on a mother and daughter, that deftly jumps between the physical and interpersonal challenges faced by those who have left everything behind for a chance at struggling anew.鈥澨
Why We Need This Now: The book鈥檚 focus on the necessity of working with our neighbors鈥攅ven those with whom we don鈥檛 share a similar life experience鈥攖o preserve the planet is timely. According to Haile, 鈥淭his book is perfect for anyone who spent 2020 cooped up at home due to the pandemic while nursing a healthy anxiety about the climate crisis. If you wish to lose yourself in a story about the natural world set in the long-term consequences of unchecked extractive industries, this is your novel.鈥
鈥楨at the Buddha鈥听by Barbara Demick

According听To: Monisha Rajesh, author of .
A trip to North Korea introduced Monisha Rajesh to听Barbara听Demick鈥檚 Nothing to Envy, which she describes as 鈥渁 gripping examination of the so-called hermit kingdom through the voices of six defectors.鈥 In , Demick uses that same ability to turn out a 鈥渇air and measured narrative鈥 to Tibet. 鈥淭his time, she鈥檚 pieced together stories told by Tibetans from Ngaba County in China to shed light on the struggles that have taken place since China occupied Tibet [in 1950],鈥 Rajesh explains. 鈥淭racing and tracking down hundreds of eyewitnesses to events between 1958 to present day, she has conducted exhaustive interviews that allow her to recreate everything from the smell of burning villages and the screams of tortured grandparents to softer moments of salty yak butter glistening in tea.鈥 Rajesh, who also visited Tibet by train for her own book, appreciated Demick鈥檚 even-handed approach. 鈥淲e see the raw untouched land pre-invasion and witness the destruction of the natural surroundings as time goes on.鈥
Why We Need This Now: 鈥淒emick presents a nuanced take, explaining that many Tibetans, including the Dalai Lama, were initially open to Chinese assistance when it came to improving the lives of Tibetans, but not to the point that their culture and religion should be eroded,鈥 says Rajesh about current-day . 鈥淭his book is a very relevant read that听sheds light on the way in which minorities are perceived and treated by the Chinese government and the reasons behind [their persecution],鈥澨齊ajesh adds.