My wife thinks I should read more fiction, and she鈥檚 right. But I don鈥檛 read enough as is, so I鈥檒l stick with what interests me鈥攏onfiction adventure narratives. Recently I burned through two new books, Thirst聽by Heather 鈥淎nish鈥澛燗nderson (;聽Mountaineers Press), and Sun is a Compass by Caroline van Hemert (;聽Little, Brown), both of which I鈥檇 recommend聽to people聽who hike聽or backpack or anyone looking to get motivated for big summer adventures.聽

Review: 鈥楾hirst鈥櫬燽y Heather聽鈥淎nish鈥 Anderson聽
Anish was most recently in the news for being the sixth person聽and first woman聽to complete the Calendar Triple Crown, which involves thru-hiking the Appalachian, Pacific Crest, and Continental Divide National Scenic Trails within a calendar year. The 7,900-mile odyssey took her 252 days.
But Thirst is about her record-breaking thru-hike of the 2,650-mile Pacific Crest Trail in 2013. On this 61-day effort she averaged an astounding 43 miles per day, and did so without the help of a support crew鈥攍ike most other thru-hikers, she resupplied and picked up self-addressed packages along the way.
For critics of speed-hiking, Thirst will become Exhibit A in their argument that you should slow down to smell the roses. Anish is often sleep-deprived, hungry, and overwhelmed (and as a function of those things, emotionally raw). She鈥檚 obsessed with the details of her locomotion: hours moving, pack weight, remaining calories, water supply, foot health, headlamp brightness. And the glorified聽diary remains centered on her trip and her goal; it deviates from the main story only occasionally, to provide insight about the聽who and why, and to give cursory attention to the landscapes that blur by.聽

Thirst聽will not be mentioned in the same sentence as Muir or Strayed, but I think it accurately and honestly depicts a record-setting experience. Fastest known times (especially the multi-month variety) are inward journeys, and their prevailing themes鈥攍ike setting goals, believing in oneself, overcoming odds, and pushing through adversity鈥攕hare more in common with the bios of Olympians and survivors.
Thirst聽reads quickly and is well written, although聽its diary structure limits introspection and forces dedication of pages to uneventful and non-pivotal days. It鈥檚聽personal, with open discussions of Anish鈥檚 failed marriage, unfulfilling attempt at conventional life, and her struggles as an overweight child. Finally, it鈥檚 a unique book鈥擜nish鈥檚 experiences put her in rare company.

Review: 鈥楾he Sun is a Compass鈥櫬燽y Caroline Van Hemert
If Thirst sounds too inside baseball, The Sun is a Compass will probably appeal to you more. In 2012 Caroline Van Hemert and her husband Pat rowed, skied, canoed, hiked, and rafted about 4,000 miles from Bellingham, Washington, to Kotzebue, a small Arctic city in northwest Alaska.
The journey was legitimately epic, as trips tend to be in that part of the world鈥攂ig storms and surf along the Inside Passage, two-week hauls between resupplies in the Yukon, sightings of thousands of caribou in the Brooks Range, more than 50 bear encounters, and four days stuck in a tent rationing one granola bar and a tablespoon of olive oil per day (shared between them).

The Sun is a Compass聽is聽personal聽and frequently harrowing. It鈥檚 not a day-by-day diary. Instead, it鈥檚 almost as if Caroline answered FAQ for 150 pages鈥斺淲hy did you do this? How did you and Pat meet? What did your family think of your plans? What was the scariest part? How many bears did you encounter? What was the largest caribou herd that you saw?聽What聽it like to not eat for four days? Did you ever think of quitting, or think you might be unable to finish?”聽Then, she added plot for another 100 pages so that the story is coherent and chronological, not disjointed.
But The Sun is a Compass is more than just an adventurous tale. Van Hemert softens the story with widely relatable themes, stories, and issues, like the migration of birds and caribou,聽her professional conflict as a new Ph.D. in ornithology,聽the development of Section 1002 on the North Slope,聽and of course the love and partnership with Pat.聽The couple now split their time between Haines聽and Anchorage, Alaska, and are raising two young boys. It鈥檚 another example of a mega Alaskan expedition that was the end of an era, not the beginning. Those adventures are hard to top.