AJ 04 Recommended Reading

Recommended Reading

The Colorado River’s every drop, radical simplicity, and the raw grace of mountain rescue

Issue 04
Where the Water Goes by David Owen
David Owen · Riverhead Books · 2017

Books about water rights tend to run, well, a little dry. But in this nonfiction look at the Colorado River and our complex dependence on its every drop, the New Yorker’s David Owen skillfully stokes curiosity for what’s around each bend. Owen’s voice is campfire casual, leading to “oh, now I get it!” moments as he unravels layers of human history and paradoxes of conservation and energy use. From archaic engineering feats to surprising “Law of the River” rules—wait, we haven’t changed that policy since the Gold Rush?—it’s a dusty, fascinating trail of whodunit from the Rocky Mountain headwaters to Mexico, and little is as simple as it seems. Where the Water Goes is important reading, and Owen’s no-stone-unturned reporting shows not only how we got here, but how we might steer onward to the future of the West.

Found by Bree Loewen
Bree Loewen · Mountaineers Books · 2017

“I love the cold. I love the struggle, the realness, the ridiculousness, and the tenderness of it. Rescue missions are not actually work, not a career; money, power, and prestige mean nothing out here.” Set in the wild, craggy peaks of Washington’s Cascades, Found is a deeply drawn memoir about volunteer mountain search and rescue. There are epics and gory injuries, yes, yet this story burns brightest when describing the motley volunteer community: individuals united by their will to abandon cozy beds at 2 a.m., risking real jobs and angry families, not to mention their lives. With 20 years of experience in picking up bloody boots and hauling fully loaded litters down scree fields, Loewen is an SAR rarity as a young mom. A wry sense of humor—body bag for a birthday present, anyone?—spliced with compassion creates an achingly true picture, scene after scene, of the raw grace we find in the outdoors.

The Unsettlers by Mark Sundeen
Mark Sundeen · Riverhead Books · 2017

Adventurers obsess over self-reliance and paring down, taking only what’s absolutely needed. Simplicity begets style, we like to say. Unless you’re taking about someone living in a utopian commune, that is—then we roll our eyes at such woolly-headed minimalism. But what really does happen when we strip away everything but the necessities? So asks Mark Sundeen in The Unsettlers, an observant investigation into the lives of three American families pursuing “radical simplicity,” where making dinner and even personal entertainment become adventurous. Can streamlined lives remain relevant? And hasn’t every other generation asked this question? There aren’t many answers here, only inquiries, which sounds heavy, but Sundeen and the people he profiles are bracingly smart, fun, and non-preachy. The Unsettlers asks us not to change our ways, but to pause and study the trail we’re on—good habits for any explorer.

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