Christine Reed
Nonfiction 2021/ 265 pages
I picked up three books at the library earlier this week that were on the shelf, waiting for me. (All on the shelf under one of the few logistics I have not changed in my life .... my library card still reads "Beryl Rullman"). Though I only read about ten pages in Jane Eyre and in A Little Life, neither spoke to me right now. They simply didn't feel like what I was wanting to partake of. So, I cracked the spine on Alone in Wonderland, the current read in my "Solo Female Adventures" Facebook group, and was immediately transported to just where I wanted to be.
Christine Reed tells her true story of hiking the Wonderland Trail 93 miles around Mt. Rainer over 12 days. But this isn't just a hiking story. She intersperses it with details of her life that explain how she arrived at this trail. She is fiercely independent, searching for her strong self, surprisingly insecure, living in a black Dodge Ram van. She abandoned the Appalachian Trail while grieving her mother's death. She never was athletic or outdoorsy, nor does she have the ideal body for backpacking adventures, but still she feels called to finding herself by challenging herself in nature.
This is not the best book I have ever read, nor is she likely to go on to become a famous author, but hers is an interesting story, told with more depth and insight into her as a person than many hiking books. It is an easy read, and enjoyable.
June 2024