This summer鈥檚 catalog of new travel, adventure, and natural history titles is deep. But why waste valuable trip-planning time surfing book reviews? Use our simple flowchart to match your summer adventure plans with the (let鈥檚 face it) one new book you鈥檒l actually get around to reading this summer.聽
The Decision:

The Books
1. 'Buffalo Jump Blues' by Keith McCafferty聽
On the high plains of Montana, a femme fatale is looking for her old flame, whose disappearance might be tied to a herd of bison that was mysteriously slaughtered. Who better to investigate than Sean Stranahan鈥攖he dilettante private eye who stars in this mystery series and who鈥檇 rather be throwing loops into trout streams. Think . $26; Viking. Available聽June 28.
2. 'What a Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins' by Jonathan Balcombe聽
The Humane Society Institute鈥檚 director of animal sentience (real job title!) tells a pop-sci audience what anglers already know: . For anyone who鈥檚 ever had a brown trout stare directly into their soul. $27; Macmillan.聽
3. 'Color Your Park' by hitRECord
Joseph Gordon-Levitt鈥檚 hipster crowdsourced-media cult made a for the National Parks Service. We'll admit:聽it鈥檚 kind of amazing. Keep the kids busy in transit鈥攐r find your zen while they鈥檙e off doing the ranger program. $20; National Park Foundation.
4. 'The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America鈥檚 National Parks' by Terry Tempest Williams
Lyrical essays and , brought to you by the high literary priestess who once famously pontificated for 100 pages on the day-to-day lives of prairie dogs. This turn is more urgent, as Williams gives us a tour of all the perils our public lands face. $27; Macmillan.
5. 'Engineering Eden: The True Story of a Violent Death, a Trial, and the Fight over Controlling Nature' by Jordan Fisher Smith
How do you sex up a detailed, hundred-year history of public-lands management philosophy? Wrap it around and the courtroom drama that followed. Great tent reading for wilderness wonks. $28; Crown.
6. 'And Soon I Heard a Roaring Wind: A Natural History of Moving Air' by Bill Streever聽
Biologist and amateur skipper Streever sails from Texas to Guatemala. Along the way, he digs deep on the . All the thrills of Kon-Tiki, but with the added fun of obscure historical meteorologists (not being sarcastic). $26; Little, Brown. Available聽July 26.
7. 'Real Food, Fake Food' by Larry Olmsted聽
Olmsted, a Forbes and USA Today food columnist (and perhaps 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 only record-holding contributor), is a globe-trotting gourmand out to in the unregulated global food industry. It鈥檚 Bourdain Lite, with some eyebrow-raising revelations about what鈥檚 on your plate. Hint: don鈥檛 order the Kobe beef sliders. $27.95; Algonquin. Available July 12.聽
8. 'On Trails: An Exploration' by Robert Moor
鈥淚t is impossible to fully appreciate the value of a trail until you鈥檝e been forced to walk through wilderness without one.鈥 So begins hiker and journalist Moor鈥檚 on how trails鈥攖he ones we plan and the ones we accidentally leave behind鈥攕hape our culture. The rare thru-hiker whose philosophical ramblings you鈥檒l actually want to read. $25; Simon & Schuster. Available聽July 12.
9. 'This Road I Ride' by Juliana Buhring
The 聽did it unsupported, unsponsored, and mourning the loss of a lover, South African whitewater kayaker Hendrik Coetzee. Her easy-reading memoir聽gets at what makes hard-charging adventure folk tick. $26.95; Norton.
10. 'Trespassing Across America: One Man's Epic, Never-Done-Before (and Sort of Illegal) Hike Across the Heartland' by Ken Ilgunas
Earnest and free-spirited Ilgunas along the proposed route of the now-nixed Keystone XL pipeline. Your summer trip may be less ambitious, but his travel memoir offers plenty to chew on regarding property rights, climate change, and the merits of batshit crazy undertakings. $27; Blue Rider Press.
11. 'Braving It: A Father, a Daughter, and an Unforgettable Journey into the Alaskan Wild' by James Campbell
What Wild did for being alone, Campbell does for being with your progeny. It鈥檚 a sweet father-daughter story, wrapped in a of hunting caribou and hiking the Brooks Range. $27; Crown.
12. 'To the Bright Edge of the World' by聽Eowyn聽Ivey
A dashing Army lieutenant leads a mapping mission through聽19th-century聽Alaska while his wife pushes Victorian social boundaries at home. Oh, and there are tree-babies and sea monsters!聽, from the Pulitzer-nominated author of聽The Snow Child. $26. Little, Brown. Available August 2.聽
13. 'Pinpoint: How GPS Is Changing Technology, Culture, And Our Minds' by Greg Milner
Premise: You haven鈥檛 begun to realize how fundamentally the Global Positioning System has . Punctuated with chilling tales of overly reliant travelers鈥 鈥渄eath by GPS,鈥 this one belongs in your pack (next to the paper map and compass that for the love of god you should be bringing with you). $27.95; Norton.