国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more

Books
Books
The books that sparked debate, changed discourse, and spawned movements in the outdoor world in the past ten years

Published: 

The Outdoor Books that Shaped the Last Decade

Ten books that sparked debate, started conversations, and launched movements in the past ten years鈥攁nd what to read next

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Digital media continued its march across the cultural landscape in the past decade, but its proliferation didn鈥檛 diminish the importance of books鈥攅ven if these days we鈥檙e thumbing through real pages less often than we鈥檙e swiping pixels on our screens. Books challenge our perceptions and paradigms, provoke curiosity, and inspire action. And for many of us, engaging with big ideas felt more important during this decade than ever before.

In that spirit, here are ten听books from the past ten years that sparked debate, changed discourse, and spawned movements in the outdoor world. These stories made us marvel at the seemingly impossible limits of the human body and feel enthralled with the wonders of nature. They mobilized us to stand up against environmental injustice, taught us about climate change, and inspired us to take our ideas out into the world. We鈥檝e alsomatched each book with recommended reading from the same genre or subject area.

鈥楾he Forest Unseen: A Year鈥檚 Watch in Nature鈥 by David George Haskell (2012)

Books
(Courtesy Penguin Random House)

Digging听Into听Nature鈥檚 Wisdom

Biologist David George Haskell is like the nature aficionado鈥檚 Malcolm Gladwell: he has a knack for getting geeky about the outdoors in a way that brings the rest of us along for the ride. In his debut book, Haskell waxes听poetic about a year spent surveying a small plot of Tennessee old-growth forest as it weathers听the seasons, using a tiny square of forest to explore much larger observations about the workings of the natural world. Blending literary finesse with scientific know-how, injects听much-needed vibrancy into the stuffy world of nature writing鈥攁nd was a Pulitzer Prize finalist, to boot.听听

Further Reading听

  • Pair Haskell鈥檚 more recent book听听(2017)听with forester Peter Wohlleben鈥檚 听(2016) for a fascinating tumble down an arboreal rabbit hole. Once you鈥檙e finished, sink into 听(2018), Richard Powers鈥 Pulitzer-winning novel that follows a motley crew of people who become just as intertwined with one another as they are with the trees and forests they tend. (By the end, the trees themselves feel like central characters.)
  • In , renowned scientist Daniel Chamovitz makes the case that our leafy pals are much more complex than we assume. Similarly, in , naturalist Jon Young contends that the only tweets that truly matter are those that emanate from birds.
  • Of course, Indigenous people have been conversing with nature since time immemorial. In (2013), botanist and professor Robin Wall Kimmerer (a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation) shares ancestral knowledge to help decode the languages of the natural world.

鈥榃ild鈥 by Cheryl Strayed听(2012)

Books
(Courtesy Knopf)

Celebrating the Heroine鈥檚 Journey

Two camps seemed to emerge when was published: one criticized Cheryl Strayed for not digging deeply enough into the nitty-gritty of backpacking on the Pacific Crest Trail; the other understood the book to be mostly about Strayed鈥檚 personal transformation and was less concerned about the backpacking technicalities.Wild has inspired countless people of all genders to hit the dirt in search of adventure and self-discovery. It also cultivated a mainstream audience鈥檚 desire for more narratives centered on women鈥檚 experiences outdoors鈥攁nd stories听in general听about the internal journeys we experience in wild places.

Further听Reading

  • Just before Wild dominated literary adventure discourse, journalist and 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Tracy Ross published (2011). It鈥檚 an unflinching account of how the wilderness helped her to not just cope听but thrive听as she confronted the lasting effects of childhood sexual abuse.
  • The gorgeous prose of dogsledder and 国产吃瓜黑料 columnist Blair Braverman鈥檚 听(2016) will sock you straight in the gut鈥攁s will the story line about the arctic alchemy that helped the author transform trauma into courage.
  • Climber Jan Redford鈥檚 听(2018) contains plenty of dashing detail about her decades in the Canadian alpine while听serving up some real talk: adventure isn鈥檛 always the cure-all we wish it to be.
  • In 听(2019),听国产吃瓜黑料听contributor听Katie Arnold traces her parallel journeys as an elite ultrarunner and a bereaved daughter fighting through a fog of grief and anxiety after her father鈥檚 death.
  • Carrot Quinn is kind of like the Patti Smith of long-distance hiking: a sensual punk-rock poet who unveils both the mystique and minutiae of trekking in her self-published memoir, 听(2015).

鈥楾he 国产吃瓜黑料 Gap: Changing the Face of the Outdoors鈥 by James Edward Mills (2014)

Books
(Courtesy Mountaineers)

Reclaiming Space

When multimedia journalist James Edward Mills followed the members of Expedition Denali during their push on the famed Alaskan peak in 2013, he knew he would document something special. After all, it was the first summit of Denali by a team of entirely African American climbers. But Mills took beyond the scope of a traditional expedition narrative, exploring the reasons for the glaring outdoor cultural divide and noting that bridging that gap would help people and the planet. Once published, the book ignited a firestorm of productive conversations about justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion in the outdoor adventure world.听

Further Reading

  • Historian Dianne D. Glave鈥檚 听(2010) is a sweeping takedown of the false notion that the black experience hasn鈥檛 always been deeply connected to the land鈥攁nd to the idea of protecting it.听
  • In 听(2014), writer and educator Carolyn Finney trains her equally critical eye on the same subject听while digging into the painful reasons why African Americans were historically underrepresented in outdoor culture.
  • Weaving together scholarship and memoir, Lauret Savoy鈥檚 (2015) is about the Mount Holyoke professor鈥檚 relationship with American landscapes. It also explores the myriad ways humans have shaped听and been shaped by听the natural world throughout history.
  • Professor and ornithologist J. Drew Lantham long found solace and belonging in wild spaces, whether or not society believed it. He explores that dichotomy听in 听(2016).
  • In (2019), U.S. poet laureate Joy Harjo鈥檚 new collection of work, the member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation writes of the resilience that binds generations of Muscogee to the ancestral lands from which they were once expelled.

鈥楾om鈥檚 River: A Story of Science and Salvation鈥櫶齜y Dan Fagin (2013)

Books
(Courtesy Bantam)

Fighting for Environmental Justice

When a Swiss chemical company arrived in Tom鈥檚 River, New Jersey, in 1952, it听promised the small township an influx of jobs. In the decades that followed, the company left the town with a legacy of contamination. When an alarming number of children received cancer diagnoses, investigative reporter Dan Fagin joined residents in searching for who鈥攐r what鈥攚as to blame. The richly detailed account, which earned the author a Pulitzer Prize, didn鈥檛 land on any hard findings. But it has become a benchmark for reporting the compelling, David and Goliath environmental justice stories that continue to play out across the country, such as in the water crisis of Flint, Michigan, or the Standing Rock Sioux鈥檚 battle against the Dakota Access pipeline. may soon appear on the silver screen:听Danny DeVito鈥檚 production company, which helped bring Erin Brockovich to theaters, optioned the film rights earlier this year.

Further Reading

  • Journalist Judy Pasternak exposes the damaging听effects of the uranium industry听in听听(2010),听detailing decades of exploitative听mining in the Four Corners region that harmed humans and the environment.
  • In听听(2018), Jonathan P. Thompson digs into a long history that led to a 2015 environmental disaster that turned Colorado鈥檚 Animas River orange with toxic sludge.听
  • (2015), by investigative reporter Andrew Nikiforuk, tells the story of one woman鈥檚 fight against the environmentally destructive practice while delving into the industry鈥檚 insidious history. Pair this book with Eliza Griswold鈥檚 听(2018) for a complex look at how energy policy shapes rural American life.
  • Inspired by his experience as a water protector at Standing Rock, Nick Estes, a citizen of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe, uses the ongoing fight against the Dakota Access pipeline to present an intergenerational view of Indigenous protest in 听(2019). Dina Gilio-Whittaker, a member of the Colville Confederated Tribes, documents centuries of resistance in 听(2019).
  • For a book that is more pensive than historical, venture south with former Border Patrol agent Francisco Cant煤 in his gorgeous debut, 听(2018). It鈥檚 as much a poetic meditation on the people and landscape of the borderlands as it is an examination of our own听imperfect human nature.听

鈥榃ave: Life and Memories After the Tsunami鈥櫶齜y Sonali Deraniyagala听(2013)

Books
(Courtesy Virago Press)

The Aftermath of Natural Disasters

On December 26, 2004, a massive earthquake in the Indian Ocean caused a tsunami that would claim the lives of roughly a quarter-million people. Those losses included the husband, children, and parents of Sri Lankan economist Sonali Deraniyagala, whose account of the incomprehensible tragedy is an excruciating read. While most of us watched the news with a detached mixture of horror and fascination, Deraniyagala drags readers right into the undertow of her grief; we can鈥檛 look away, nor should we. While natural disasters are often chronicled in scientific and sensational tones, rightly humanizes an outsized tragedy.

Further Reading

  • A fictional account of an all-too-real natural disaster, novelist Jesmyn Ward鈥檚 (2011) tracks a family on Mississippi鈥檚 Gulf Coast before, during, and after Hurricane Katrina鈥檚 rampage. It is no less moving for being fiction, especially given that the author experienced the storm鈥檚 devastation firsthand.
  • Former firefighter and 国产吃瓜黑料听contributor Kyle Dickman brings similarly personal insight to (2015), deftly weaving together the history of wildland firefighting, an account of the devastating Yarnell Hill Fire, and portraits of those who lost their lives trying to stop the flames. Michael Kodas, a onetime seasonal firefighter, looks at that same wildfire and others in (2017), which analyzes the human and environmental cost of these catastrophic infernos. Author听Gary Ferguson dissects the science behind massive wildfires in听(2017).
  • In 听(2017), journalist and听国产吃瓜黑料 contributorKathryn Miles travels the country to learn from those on the frontline of seismic events. In 听(2017), reporter Henry Fountain recounts the gripping story of a magnitude 9.2 earthquake that rocked southern Alaska in 1964, focusing on the efforts of noted seismologist George Plafker to understand what prompted the violent temblor.

鈥楾he Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History鈥櫶齜y Elizabeth Kolbert (2014)

Books
(Courtesy Macmillan)

Inspiring Conservation鈥檚 New Wave

The title of 听references the undeniable fact that our planet is well into its sixth wave of mass die-offs, a canary鈥攐r, more accurately, a snow leopard鈥攊n the coal mine for what鈥檚 to come. Drawing on the work of scientists she encounters while reporting across this rapidly changing world, the environmental journalist contends that at this stage of the Anthropocene (the era in which humankind left an indelible and perhaps irreversible mark on the landscape), it鈥檚 pretty much all our fault. While that鈥檚 a sobering pill to swallow, Kolbert does throw us a sliver of bone: the clock鈥檚 ticking, but it hasn鈥檛 yet stopped.听

Carrying a torch lit decades ago by Rachel Carson鈥檚 groundbreaking , Kolbert unmasks the gritty truth about our role in the ongoing destruction of nature and asks a question echoed by all of the recommended works below: what are we going to do about it?

Further Reading

  • If you鈥檙e convinced that tackling unwieldy issues like mass extinction听is beyond the power of one person, pick up 听(2019). Author Tucker Malarkey鈥檚 globe-trotting tale of a fly-fisherman trying to prevent endangered Pacific Rim salmon from going the way of the dodo is sure to inspire.
  • For a more lyrical kick in the pants, check out author and activist Terry Tempest Williams鈥 new collection, 听(2019). It鈥檚 an urgent call to action wrapped in notions of community and tied with a big bow of hope.
  • Continuing a tradition launched with 听back in 1986, 听(2013), by environmental scientists B. Lynn Ingram and Frances Malamud-Roam, traces the arc of history in order to ask hard questions about the future.听
  • With a more colorful take on our most precious commodity, David Owen details a rather entertaining journey along the arm of the West鈥檚 most famous waterway in 听(2017). 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Heather Hansman paddles the Colorado鈥檚 largest tributary in 听(2019)听and takes a nuanced look at why water rights are so contentious.听听

鈥楤orn to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen鈥櫶齜y Christopher McDougall (2009)

Books
(Courtesy Knopf Doubleday)

Pushing Human Limits

Journalist and runner Christopher McDougall traveled to Mexico鈥檚 Copper Canyon in search of the secret to an injury-free stride. He soon became convinced that the secret wasn鈥檛 a matter of improving his form, but of converting to a more minimalist style of footwear favored by the runners of the Tarahumara tribe, who log ultra distances in nothing more than a pair of thin sandals. While ignited the barefoot running craze that reverberated in athletic shoe design for years after it published, the real reason we stretched the timeline to include it here is because McDougall鈥檚 book helped to launch听a collective obsession with long-haul running听and the limits of physical endurance.听

Further Reading

  • Dig into the science behind athletic potential听with 国产吃瓜黑料 columnist and former physicist Alex Hutchinson鈥檚 (2018). Onetime Appalachian Trail record-holder Jennifer Pharr Davis takes a more anecdotal approach to the subject in 听(2018). The book delves into the technical details of the author鈥檚 FKT attempt听and profiles others who have pushed themselves to new limits on foot.
  • If memoir is your thing, try to keep up with alpine runner Kilian Jornet as he summits peaks and chews through trails at breakneck speed in 听(2011). For a more relatable tale, settle in with Mirna Valerio鈥檚 听(2017), a stereotype-busting jaunt through the author鈥檚 journey as an unlikely ultrarunner. In 听(2019), thru-hiker Heather 鈥淎nish鈥 Anderson chronicles the physical and emotional toll that comes with smashing records on the Pacific Crest Trail. In the vertical realm, Tommy Caldwell鈥檚 听(2017) offers a fascinating study in perseverance.
  • For a water-based endurance story, cozy up with (2018), journalist Dave Shively鈥檚 account of paddler Ed Gillet鈥檚 groundbreaking 1987 solo sea-kayak crossing from the California coast to Maui.

鈥楾he Nature Principle: Human Restoration and the End of Nature-Deficit Disorder鈥櫶齜y Richard Louv (2011)

Books
(Courtesy Algonquin)

Plugging into Nature

When prolific author Richard Louv dropped 听in 2005, he proposed a then-groundbreaking idea that modern kids suffer from 鈥渘ature-deficit disorder.鈥 In , Louv extends that revelation to adults鈥攊mploring us to deepen our relationship with the natural world as a means to improve our existence and ensure our survival. Chances are you鈥檒l see one of Louv鈥檚 books name-checked whenever someone connects the dots between human health and the natural world.听

Further Reading

  • Cited nearly as often as Louv鈥檚 works, (2017) by journalist and Oustide听contributor Florence Williams explores the therapeutic benefits of spending time among trees.
  • In (2018), biologist Clemens G. Arvay explores the titular phenomenon, first coined by entomologist E.O. Wilson, which posits that connecting with nature is an important part of our long-term evolution.听
  • If there鈥檚 anyone who understands the magic of time spent under arboreal canopies, it鈥檚 Qing Li, the Japanese doctor who helped spread the gospel of shinrin-yoku (鈥渇orest bathing鈥) around the world. Li鈥檚 book, 听(2018), is a joyful guide to demystifying the practice.
  • Artist and writer Jenny Odell鈥檚 (2019) is part cultural critique, part path to empowerment. In a world where the reach of capitalism鈥檚 digital arm seems to cultivate more anxiety with each pinged notification, Odell argues that we are drawn further away from more important connections with the natural world around us, with each other, and with ourselves.

鈥楾his Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate鈥櫶齜y Naomi Klein (2014)听

Books
(Courtesy Simon & Schuster)

Sounding the Climate Change Alarm

Al Gore is often credited for raising the collective consciousness about global warming in 2006 with ,听but the former vice president鈥檚 book and subsequent film were just the tip of the proverbial, rapidly melting iceberg. Canadian author and activist Naomi Klein doubled down with the fiery and polarizing , a book that proposes we鈥檒l never right the climate ship if we continue clinging to the very framework that鈥檚 sinking it: capitalism. Klein鈥檚 vision of environmental liberation requires detaching ourselves from the sticky grip of fossil fuels听and envisions a collective effort far beyond switching to stainless-steel straws. Of course, we still have a long way to go.听

Further Reading

  • Author and activist Bill McKibben has been talking climate since Al Gore was still serving as a senator from Tennessee in the late 1980s. McKibben鈥檚 newest book, 听(2019), reflects on how little we鈥檝e moved the needle听but offers hope that, with concerted effort, we still can. In 听(2019), journalist David Wallace-Wells comes to a more dystopian conclusion.
  • Pulitzer finalist Elizabeth Rush鈥檚 (2018) is certainly devastating, but her elegant writing on the impact of rising seas will keep you reading until the end.

鈥楨nginering Eden: The True Story of a Violent Death, a Trial, and the Fight Over Controlling Nature鈥櫶齜y Jordan Fisher Smith (2016)

Books
(Courtesy Crown)

Unearthing Nature鈥檚 Seedy Underbelly

When a young man named Harry Walker was fatally mauled by a Yellowstone grizzly in 1972, his family sued the National Park Service. Former ranger Jordan Fisher Smith uses this incident to seduce the reader with a public lands parable masquerading as a wildly entertaining thriller. Along the way, he exposes a lengthy history of criminal mismanagement that left people鈥攁nd far more bears鈥攄ead in its wake. While our endless appetite for the nasty business of true crime likely stretches back for time eternal, proved that the natural world proves just as compelling a backdrop as a serial killer鈥檚 den for the devious hand of man.

Further Reading

  • In 听(2017), David Grann investigates the heartbreaking oil-related murders of landowning members of the Osage tribe in 1920s Oklahoma. Fellow journalist and 国产吃瓜黑料听contributor Annette McGivney similarly dissects the truth behind the stabbing death of Grand Canyon hiker Tomomi Hanamure in 听(2018). The author becomes part of the narrative when her reportage unleashes her own repressed childhood trauma.
  • For something more whimsical, settle in with (2018), angler and author Kirk Wallace Johnson鈥檚 engrossing tale of a fly-fishing museum caper. And leave room for 听(2019), a fascinating expos茅 of the most expensive and sought-after fungus among us by investigative journalist Ryan Jacobs.
  • Finally, make all your CSI: Outdoors fantasies come true with forensic ecologist Patricia Wiltshire鈥檚 听(2019), where fungal spores and pollen play Watson to the author鈥檚 Holmes.
Corrections: (04/30/2025) This story has been updated to correct the title of Michael Kodas' book. 国产吃瓜黑料 regrets the error.