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Download PDF Wild

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Wild

One woman
10,000 miles on foot
6 countries
8 pairs of hiking boots
3,000 cups of tea
1,000 days and nights

"The only way to survive three years of walking was to embrace the moment of now.”―from Wild by Nature

Not since Cheryl Strayed gifted us with her adventure on the Pacific Crest Trail in her memoir, Wild, has there been such a powerful epic adventure by a woman alone. In Wild by Nature, National Geographic Explorer Sarah Marquis takes you on the trail of her ten-thousand-mile solo hike across the remote Gobi desert from Siberia to Thailand, at which point she was transported by boat to complete the hike at her favorite tree in Australia.

Against nearly insurmountable odds and relying on hunting and her own wits, Sarah Marquis survived the Mafia, drug dealers, thieves on horseback who harassed her tent every night for weeks, temperatures from subzero to scorching, life-threatening wildlife, a dengue fever delirium in the Laos jungle, tropic ringworm in northern Thailand, dehydration, and a life-threatening abscess.

This is an incredible story of adventure, human ingenuity, persistence, and resilience that shows firsthand what it is to adventure as a woman in the most dangerous of circumstance, what it is to be truly alone in the wild, and why someone would challenge themselves with an expedition others would call crazy. For Marquis, her story is about freedom, being alive and wild by nature.

  • Sales Rank: #308544 in Books
  • Published on: 2016-02-09
  • Released on: 2016-02-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.49" h x 1.00" w x 6.32" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 272 pages

Review

"A vibrant epic, this wondrous book is, at its core, a story of resilience. Marquis is industrious, and I recommend this book to all people seeking to discover the massive magnitude of their own potential power. A triumph!" -Aspen Matis, author of Girl in the Woods: A Memoir

"Destined to become a classic in the travel writing genre. The descriptions of time and place are just detailed enough to become animated with life, and the author's courage is inspiring." -Library Journal (starred review)

"Tough women explore the great outdoors alone: But while Strayed (author of Wild) is an amateur hiker, Marquis is a pro." -Entertainment Weekly

"Straightforward and forthright, this is adventure writing as it was meant to be." -Booklist

“A National Geographic Explorer of the Year in 2014 recounts her journey with the clear-eyed resolve and keen observational skills that make her a successful solo trekker.” ―Book Page

About the Author
National Geographic Explorer SARAH MARQUIS has been profiled in The New York Times Magazine and National Geographic. During the last twenty-three years, Marquis circumnavigated the globe on foot once and then stopped counting. She’s been covered for solo expeditions in many countries, such as Australia and South America, and her first long walk was the famous Pacific Crest Trail in the United States.

Most helpful customer reviews

67 of 74 people found the following review helpful.
Interesting Moments
By The Invisible Pam
Let me start by saying that I'm a self confessed armchair adventurer. With the likes of Ed Viesturs I've gone up K2. With George Grinnell I've witnessed travesty unfold on the barrens of Canada, and with Tabor I've descended amazingly deep within the bowels of the earth.

I've also walked with woman hikers. Jennifer Pharr Davis in CALLED AGAIN and Patricia Herr in PEAK BAGGING, and Cheryl Strayed's WILD, just to name a few.

And I mention all these titles for two reasons. One to let you know what literature is out there if you are just getting started with your own armchair adventuring; and two, to show that I have a fairly good grasp of what the literature looks like. Which is to say that I almost know what I'm talking about.

So WILD BY NATURE...

The first thing I noticed was that you can tell that an American didn't write this book. The author is Swiss I believe and speaks French. Certainly her sentence structure and thought processes seem European to me. So that was not lost in converting this book to English. Her world view though is different and that took some getting used to.

The second thing I noticed, and which is of a lot more importance is that the book is not written like a diary or a reconstruction of a story based on a diary. It's more remote, like she had no written record to call upon, and maybe that's why I never felt like I was there with her. When I climbed with Viesturs I felt the cold and the lack of oxygen. I didn't feel the 104 degree heat of Mongolia.

And what is more distressing than the lack of immediacy is that the author has edited out thoughts and actions. A perfect example of this is the scary night visits she experienced when in Mongolia. For some reason men on horseback would show in the middle of the night at her camps no matter how hard she had tried to stay hidden.

We are told about these strange and frightening occurrences but only in the vaguest terms. Not what the men said or did or how she reacted to them. When did they go away? What did they want? She doesn't tell us. Which I'm afraid is a cheat and not the way to go about writing this sort of thing up, imho. If there's something you don't want to address then for heaven's sake don't bring it up. It's not like we'll know the difference.

Which brings my third and final point to the fore. There's some jumpiness in the telling. I'm used to reading the diaries of settlers so I'm comfortable with jumps in time in that format. But as I said this isn't a diary so the jumps are a little strange and unwelcome.

And perhaps this ties into some of the continuity problems. One example is where she tells us her personal philosophy is to never stay in one spot for more than one night unless it is an absolute emergency. Then a couple of pages later she stops for 3 days and has a nice rest with a tour guide.

She then tells us that she plans to ask him why the Mongolians are behaving in such an unexplained fashion -- women taking off their tops when in her presence and the men appearing in the middle of the night. She and the tour guide have a good laugh over these questions but we aren't let in on the answers.

WHAT DO I REALLY THINK ::: I think this book has features of interest but that it's going to frustrate quite a few reviewers. One should definitely read a sample chapter before purchasing.

24 of 27 people found the following review helpful.
This is what happens when you put Survivor and National Geographic together
By Connie (She who hikes with dogs)
Reading about this journey reminds me of a made-for-TV production, like a combination of "Survivor" meets "National Geographic." Sarah Marquis works for National Geographic and is labeled an "extreme walker." Her walks are sponsored and she has a support team back in Switzerland (her native country) she can fall back on when things go wrong along the way. These all-expense-paid trips somehow make her journeys contrived, highly edited and made to show extremes along the way. She maintains a blog, and writes in both French and English. While Marquis' descriptions of landscapes are beautiful, her lack of intimacy with her human subjects prevent the reader from truly experiencing the journey.

It was thus hard for me at the start to get into this journey. She starts it out in Mongolia, and there's not a nice thing to say about the men here. The nomadic men are fat and have a tendency to urinate around her. Well, that's nice! They antagonize her at night when she's in her tent, so she quickly has to learn to get in survival mode and seeks dark culverts instead. Add to that the harsh Gobi desert that requires three attempts to cross, and you get quite an adventure.

Things get better in China, although once again the men seem more menacing. The trek through Siberia is marked with the death of her dog D'Joe back in Switzerland, but she continues on. In Laos she deals with drug traffickers who give her a real scare. Things improve a bit in Thailand and then in Australia everything ends and the journey's over.

But why was this journey done? She never explains. Many things happen, especially in Mongolia, that are left a mystery. My only answer is that because she was fully sponsored for this hike, she had to hike this path for National Geographic, take plenty of photos (of which not one is in the Advance Reader's Copy I read) just so she can tell the world how she did it, by pushing a cart full of her supplies and keeping her SPOT tracker going for her support team back in Switzerland. She had her satellite phone for emergencies.

This book describes a three-year journey, but it doesn't feel like three years. The trip begins in June 2010 and the last date she gives readers is August 26, 2012. That's more like two years and a few months. Not once along the journey did I ever want to "be there" with the author. Isn't that what a good travelogue, or an adventure, is about? If it is Marquis' attempt at showing that women can do these extreme adventures, too, she may have convinced a few readers, but at what cost?

The writing is good and there are indeed some tense moments along the way, so at times I wavered between three and four stars. I'll settle for 3+.

31 of 37 people found the following review helpful.
Disjointed and many unanswered questions. Author should have kept a journal to write the book with
By Dogs & Horses
I wanted to love this book - I love the idea behind it. A woman striking out to explore some of the most fascinating areas of the world, on her own, on foot and without the typical tourist luxuries. Almost immediately, I realized that I don't like Sarah Marquis much - as a writer, as a person or as another woman. That's a shame because this book is all about her and it is her story, so finding her bothersome tainted every word. As a woman who has traveled some difficult locales alone, I fully respect and understand the urge to go and see and experience the planet. My problem with Ms Marquis is her hubris and her selfishness while she followed this same urge. Ms Marquis repeatedly seems disdainful of the local people she has contact with throughout her journey in Mongolia and China.

The book is written in a manner that feels more like a jumble of memories tossed together with a stream of consciousness instead of from notes or journals kept during the adventure. Events happen and are never resolved, questions are never answered - why did Mongolian men urinate on or near her repeatedly? Did she ever actually see wolves, or just dream about it? Why did she schedule this adventure knowing her beloved dog was elderly and likely wouldn't live until her return? Why not wait? Why didn't she bother to educate herself about basic culture and customs before traipsing through China? She states that she was glad she didn't fill her mind with this extra information, but that struck me as arrogant and dangerous. Maybe if she had, she could have avoided putting herself in multiple dangerous positions. Many of the problems she had throughout the book were self inflicted. I don't hate this book, but I don't like it enough to recommend it to my friends - all of whom would ask the same questions.

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