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A Walk in the Park: The True Story of a Spectacular Misadventure in the Grand Canyon

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A deeply moving account ever of walking the Grand Canyon, a highly dangerous, life-changing 750-mile trek.

The Grand Canyon is an American treasure, visited by more than 6 million people a year, many of whom are rendered speechless by its vast beauty, mystery, and complexity. Now, in A Walk in the Park , author Kevin Fedarko chronicles his year-long effort to find a 750-mile path along the length of the Grand Canyon, through a vertical wilderness suspended between the caprock along the rims of the abyss and the Colorado River, which flows along its bottom.

Consisting of countless cliffs and steep drops, plus immense stretches with almost no access to water, and the fact that not a single trail links its eastern doorway to its western terminus, this jewel of national parks is so challenging that when Fedarko departed fewer people had completed the journey in one single hike than had walked on the moon. The intensity of the effort required him to break his trip into several legs, each of which held staggering dangers and unexpected discoveries.

Accompanying Fedarko through this sublime yet perilous terrain is the award-winning photographer Peter McBride, who captures the stunning landscape in breathtaking photos. Together, they encounter long-lost Native American ruins, the remains of Old West prospectors’ camps, present day tribal activists, and signs that commercial tourism is impinging on the park’s remote wildness.

An epic adventure, action-packed survival tale, and a deep spiritual journey, A Walk in the Park gives us an unprecedented glimpse of the crown jewel of America’s National an iconic landscape framed by ancient rock whose contours are recognized by all, but whose secrets and treasures are known to almost no one, and whose topography encompasses some of the harshest, least explored, most awe-inspiring terrain in the world.

488 pages, Hardcover

First published May 28, 2024

5004 people are currently reading
32095 people want to read

About the author

Kevin Fedarko

6 books293 followers
Kevin Fedarko lives in northern New Mexico and works as a part-time river guide in Grand Canyon National Park. In addition to his travel narratives in Outside, where he worked as a senior editor, Fedarko’s work has appeared in Esquire, National Geographic Adventure, and other publications, and has been anthologized in The Best American Travel Writing in 2004 and 2006. Fedarko was a staff writer at Time magazine from 1991 to 1997, where his work helped garner an Overseas Press Club Award for a story on the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. Fedarko earned a Masters of Philosophy in Russian history at Oxford in 1990. His 2013 release, The Emerald Mile: The Epic Story of the Fastest Ride in History Through the Heart of the Grand Canyon, won a NOBA- a National Outdoor Book Award.

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5 stars
5,636 (44%)
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3 stars
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72 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,881 reviews
Profile Image for Sharon Orlopp.
Author 1 book1,081 followers
November 10, 2024
My favorite quote about reading is by Kevin Ansbro: A book should grab you by the lapels and kiss you into tomorrow. Kevin Fedarko's, A Walk in the Park, grabbed me and wouldn't let me go. I listened to Fedarko narrate this incredible journey on audiobook.

I recently read Fedarko's book, The Emerald Mile: The Epic Story of the Fastest Ride in History Through the Heart of the Grand Canyon and could not put it down. His writing style is captivating and descriptive with thorough research. The fast pace of both books kept me continually engaged.

A month ago, a friend and I hiked the Grand Canyon from the North Rim to the South Rim. Our goal was to complete it in one day, despite the signs in the Grand Canyon and all the information on the internet that recommends spending one night in the Canyon. We ended up spending one unplanned night in the Canyon.

A Walk in the Park is Fedarko's experience spending one year in the Grand Canyon hiking without trails. Lots of lessons learned!

I highly recommend it!
Profile Image for Moonkiszt.
2,920 reviews335 followers
July 3, 2024
This is certainly one of the BEST non-fiction books I've read this year. . .in my top 10 for sure!

The author, Kevin Fedarko and his good buddy Pete McBride (a National Geographic photographer) decide that a hike through the Grand Canyon was just the thing to fill in the bare spots on their calendars. This would be a thorough hike - from start to finish - and had rarely if ever been completely done, by live people. That is, as in still living. Yes, there are some dark shades in this read.

The plan is Kevin will write a book about it. Pete will take the pictures, and they will both take care of each other. Documented is the birth of the idea, the research, the team gathering, the support building, fund finding, and then the first steps on to the path as the delivery team drives away with encouraging cheers. They are on their own.

The author entertains, amuses, appalls, overshares and gets down and gritty with historical outrages as he steps foot on land that hasn't been stepped on in ages. Literally. From scavenging for dinner, to being taken into deep history by surprise indigenous team members, to eye-to-eye moments with unexpected creatures, readers are pulled right along with the hikers. Captivated by this travel tale, hanging off rocks, sliding down inclines, the wide-ranging thought process of the author waxed lyrical in surprisingly right places. He's full of history, telling both sides of the story - of the whites who "discovered" the place and then have spent the next few centuries exploring it. Then swings to the other side - the people who lived here in the cracks and crannies, for millennia - who called it home until they left - for reasons unknown, and then in later days for reasons shamefully known.

Along the hike's winding dangerous path were so many close calls, so thirsty, cold, hurt, stung, stabbed, burnt, dazzled, charmed, harmed and utterly spent. They were out in the Wild and in the beauty of all that red, orange, yellow, marbled layered world - as I read I could just about hear their crunching footfalls, deep breathing while the rustling of their packs carried up the echoes bouncing up the surfaces. Transported. That's what I was. An incredible gift as I will never be able to go there myself.

*A sincere thank you to Kevin Fedarko, Scribner, and NetGalley for an ARC to read and review independently.*
Profile Image for Micah Suzanne.
61 reviews4 followers
May 23, 2024
At the start of this story, I just thought it was simply a story of taking on a through hike of the Grand Canyon. What I was not prepared for was the intricate details and imagery painted by the author. The history of the tribes within the grand canyon, and the details of their struggles, cultures, beliefs and hope for the future were so inspiring. I hope everyone takes a moment to read this book and to appreciate the greatness of the canyon.
Profile Image for Katey Orr.
1 review
July 21, 2024
If I'd had a dollar for each time I yelled "Oh, fuck off" while reading this, I'd have been making a living wage.
Profile Image for Cathrine ☯️ .
791 reviews407 followers
October 6, 2024
5 🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾
This story provided way more than I was expecting except the hard copy photographs, some of which can be viewed at hiking partner/photographer/filmmaker Pete McBride’s website
https://petemcbride.com/photography/g...
or in his book The Grand Canyon: Between River and Rim.
Seriously breathtaking images.

Without going there, this book will help you see it through their eyes and experience.
I had NO idea what it meant to hike the entire 750 miles of Grand Canyon National Park—one of the hardest things you can do on earth.
I laughed, I cried, I got angry. I was totally in love with their misadventure and so sad to have the journey come to an end. The author's narration was excellent and most entertaining.

But wait! For the abridged version there’s a documentary film (currently showing on Disney+).
View the trailer here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uu2Fp...
Profile Image for Laurie Fink.
19 reviews1 follower
June 20, 2024
I’m clearly in the minority in not falling in love with this book. The stop and start between the hike, the historical detail and the author’s personal sidebars dragged for me. I kept waiting to be swept up and carried to the end. Alas it didn’t happen. I love true adventure stories with momentum & this one fell
short.
Profile Image for Daniel Ray.
450 reviews8 followers
July 11, 2025
The Grand Canyon. Magnificent views. Old Indian lands. Some venture down to the river along one of the trails. Some start at the north rim and hike to the south rim. A 24 mile Rim to Rim is a pretty rigorous hike. But these two, a writer and a photographer, take on 235 miles through the canyon along the river east to west. There is no trail so they map out their own plan. It’s 750 miles. They’ll go up and down along the cliffs and crevaces. They’ll need regular water sources. More people have walked on the moon than done this. And they were amateurs.
Profile Image for Casey.
1,057 reviews62 followers
March 30, 2024
This book is a disappointment (at least for me, not for some others). It strikes me as a wannabe Bill Bryson “A Walk In The Woods” without the humor (although there are numerous attempts at being humorous, but most fall flat) nor the engaging writing style. I had high hopes for this book as I am a fan of the Grand Canyon, but alas it was not to be.

I received a free Kindle copy of this book courtesy of Net Galley and the publisher with the understanding that I would post a review on Net Galley, Goodreads, Amazon and my nonfiction book review blog. I also posted it to my Facebook page.
Profile Image for Jess the Shelf-Declared Bibliophile.
2,398 reviews914 followers
March 8, 2025
3.5 stars. I liked that the author included relevant history about the area, from everything to cave drawings and ancient civilizations to the terrible way that Native American tribes have been and continue to be treated. I would say this side of his writing made up close to half the book, the other half of course being his sectional hikes.
Profile Image for Rachaelbookhunter.
422 reviews
May 29, 2024
More than 6 million people visit the Grand Canyon each year, and yet it remains a beautiful mystery. A Walk In The Park is the story of a year long journey along the length of the canyon through the interior and up and down the vertical walls. A 750 mile path. Limited access to water. No through trail. Together with his photographer friend they encounter long-lost Native American ruins, the remains of Old West prospectors’ camps, present day tribal activists, and signs that commercial tourism is impinging on the park’s remote wildness.

An epic adventure, action-packed survival tale, and a deep spiritual journey, A Walk in the Park gives an inside look at the Grand Canyon and all the wonders within.

This book!!! So good! It's everything I wanted to read. Last year I read Brave The Wild River which was about a journey along the Colorado River. I loved it. I never thought the Grand Canyon is something I'd be so interested in. But reading A Walk In The Park you can't help being amazed at it. I've never been there but through Kevin Fedarko's writing I feel a little bit closer and have gained an understanding. The descriptions are breathtaking, seriously great nature writing. I took a long time reading this book. It's over 500 pages but I also wanted to soak in every detail. It was a long trek so why not a long read. But it was never, never boring or slow. How could it be when there was action and drama. It was also funny. Just wait until you read about how the trip came about. Don't skip the footnotes. Those are also fun.

A Walk In The Park is nature writing, adventure, survival, and history all rolled into one. It's such an interesting book. I learned so much. Within the first 20% of the book I had looked up names, places, events. Many other books have now been added to my TBR.

I've found my top read of the year and can't wait to get a physical copy. A Walk In The Park is available now. Thank you so much to Scribner Books and Netgalley for the chance to read!
Profile Image for Claire Reads Books.
157 reviews1,432 followers
July 18, 2024
This went on a little too long towards the end (much like the actual hike in the book, I guess), but this was an enjoyable read, albeit not aspirational in the way of big hike books like Wild or A Walk in the Woods…basically, don’t try to hike the entire length of the Grans Canyon, you will probably die trying (and I honestly can’t believe these guys didn’t). Nevertheless, I did appreciate the humility and thoughtfulness of Kevin Fedarko’s reflections on the trip, and his attention to the history and present concerns of the Native tribes in and around the canyon also felt like an important corrective to canonical Southwest texts like Desert Solitaire.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
257 reviews9 followers
June 16, 2024
I enjoyed the sections about the trip itself but really got bogged down in the expansive history and details about the Grand Canyon itself. Appreciate the history but was looking for a more personal account.
Profile Image for CatReader.
940 reviews152 followers
July 5, 2024
3.5 stars rounded down.

In 2015, journalist Kevin Fedarko and photographer Pete McBride began a 750 mile hike thru the interior of the Grand Canyon, with some support in exchange for profiling their journey in National Geographic magazine (here's a NatGeo article about their journey). In addition the NatGeo pieces and social media fodder, their hike has produced a photo book (McBride's The Grand Canyon: Between River and Rim) published in 2018, and now, this 2024 512 page book/15 hour audiobook. Not many people have completed the 750 mile Grand Canyon hike (around 2 dozen as of 2015), and even fewer have completed the journey in one uninterrupted stretch. Fedarko and McBride were woefully unprepared during the start of their hike, packing way too heavily and not being physically fit enough to keep pace with their much more experienced hiking group, and they both had to be medically evacuated after a few weeks (this part reminded me quite a bit of Cheryl Strayed's lack of preparation for her Pacific Crest Trail hike in Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail). They took some time off, heeded advice from more experienced hikers, and resumed their journey through the fall, winter and spring of 2015-2016, sometimes as a duo and sometimes with a group. In the end, in a paradoxical move, Fedarko chose to leave a small segment of the hike incomplete so he would not be added to the completion list.

This book is definitely interesting and eye-opening. In terms of pacing, I felt like the book dragged on too long and got sidetracked by many tangents. Fedarko explores the history of the Grand Canyon pretty extensively, including the Native American tribes for whom the Grand Canyon are their ancestral lands, the ongoing battles between Native Americans and the US government and developers over land rights, the current state of the canyon in terms of ecotourism, and other hikers who've successfully or unsuccessfully hiked the canyon (including several who've died in their attempt).

Personally, I visited the Grand Canyon on a family vacation when I was around 6 years old, and I remember being hot, miserable, and not impressed. Our Grand Canyon visit consisted largely of driving to a few curated tourist overlooks and peering at the canyon over the guardrail; we didn't opt for rafting, hiking, or horseback riding into the canyon. It's not a very accessible park to people who don't want to venture into the canyons (and venturing into the canyons if you're not prepared/experienced has many risks, as Fedarko outlines -- both to yourself, to rescue workers who risk their lives to come to your aid in a Medevac emergency, and long-term environmental risks to the canyon's unique ecosystem). I've personally found some of the red rock National Parks of Utah to be a much better, more accessible experience for those of us less athletically-inclined.

Further reading - American journeys/the American West/hiking (in roughly chronological order):
Bold Spirit: Helga Estby's Forgotten Walk Across Victorian America by Linda Lawrence Hunt
Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the Grand Canyon by Melissa Sevigny
Grandma Gatewood's Walk: The Inspiring Story of the Woman Who Saved the Appalachian Trail by Ben Montgomery
Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey (a book I started but couldn't finish)
Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail by Cheryl Strayed
The Oregon Trail: A New American Journey by Rinker Buck
Dear Bob and Sue by Matt and Karen Smith
The Last Ride of the Pony Express: My 2,000-mile Horseback Journey into the Old West by Will Grant
Ghost Town Living: Mining for Purpose and Chasing Dreams at the Edge of Death Valley by Brent Underwood

My statistics:
Book 143 for 2024
Book 1746 cumulatively
5 reviews
June 23, 2024
“Who are these Clowns” as in title of Chapter 10

A poorly designed and executed endeavor doing great disservice to the sublime natural wonder it claims to be honoring. As in Chapter 10. Ham handed writing style as well. We and the Canyon deserve something much more Grand. Really 0 instead of 1 star.
Profile Image for Diana.
835 reviews8 followers
August 14, 2024
I enjoyed the first two-thirds of this book but the last third was a slog. I dreaded going back to it. I ended up listening to it at 1.5 speed just to get through it and be done.

Several things ruined it for me. The most profound was that it turned into a sanctimonious heavy-handed rant against the commercialization of the Grand Canyon. Of course his point is valid but his diatribe against the helicopter tours was tedious and tiresome and felt neverending. I wish an editor or friend or someone had helped him to see that making his point and moving on would be more effective.

Minor irritations: he hiked with his friend Pete and in the audiobook he used a comical Beavis and Butt-Head voice that was fingernails on a chalkboard to me. Finally he used too many overblown metaphors. I get that it’s very difficult to try to capture the grandeur and majesty of the Grand Canyon but simple is better.

That said the part of the book where he focused on and described the through-hike itself was very enjoyable. He was honest and forthright about the many mistakes he and his friend made due to their naïveté and lack of preparation. He was appropriately grateful for the help and support others supplied and gracious in acknowledging their efforts. Despite the sometimes overly florid language he did a very good job of describing the richness and variation of the Grand Canyon while providing insight into its history and its significant role in the lives of the indigenous Native Americans.
Profile Image for Tanner Nelson.
327 reviews23 followers
October 10, 2024
Like the canyon through which its author trekked, "A Walk in the Park" meanders intransigently. There is a central plot, but it is often so obscured by side stories and tangents that by the time the book returns to its central story, the reader has to go back several pages to recall salient details from the previous section. I thought the book's central premise was promising, but ultimately I put it down before finishing (not unlike most hikers who attempt a through hike of the Grand Canyon like the one Fedarko embarked upon).

Fedarko uses similes liberally. In the beginning, they pop with color and light up the scene. But after a while, his semantic pattern becomes rote and the similes loose their power. The Grand Canyon's beauty and grandeur are worthy of superlative praise, but Fedarko's descriptions fall flat after a few chapters.

Despite my grumblings with the writing, I do think Fedarko is on to something here. When he tells the story of the canyon's history (both geological and sociological), his descriptions are always vivid and compelling. I loved learning about the eminent men and women whose histories are intertwined with the rock. "A Walk in the Park" is at its best when it is performing as a quick, accessible history of the Grand Canyon. Unfortunately, those moments are too fleeting.
Profile Image for Joy D.
2,989 reviews315 followers
December 5, 2024
The bulk of Kevin Fedarko’s memoir describes his near traverse of Grand Canyon National Park with his friend Pete McBride, which they completed in stages with help from experienced backpacking guides. They started off woefully unprepared, as the author freely admits and does not recommend. Several of their trips become treks of survival in the extreme heat with little water. In addition to the hiking, they must occasionally make excursions up to the rim and rappel back down.

The author provides side discussions of related topics, such as geology, history, weather, issues related to the region’s indigenous peoples, flora and fauna, environmental concerns, tourism, and stories of people who have made an impact on the region. Fedarko includes personal details such as how he became interested in the Grand Canyon, his previous experiences with Colorado River expeditions, and his family’s history. There are many stories of people who did not fare well during their treks. If you enjoy reading about walking trips in perilous terrain, this is one is excellent. As a bonus, you are guaranteed to learn something. I found it a most enjoyable read.

4.5
Profile Image for Rachel (bookmamareviews).
292 reviews8 followers
June 21, 2024
**Thank you to Simon & Schuster for the free copy for review.**

Those of you who have been around a while know how much I love adventure memoirs. A trip to the top of Everest? YES. A swim across the Florida straits? YES, PLEASE!

A hike through the entire Grand Canyon? UHMMM YES, IS THIS EVEN A QUESTION ANYMORE?!

There is something just so provoking, so inspiring, so enticing about deep diving into a grand adventure. Especially the grand adventures that are not just merely concocted by the imaginations of their authors.

A WALK IN THE PARK by Kevin Fedarko is absolutely no exception to this most beloved favorite genre of mine. And, as an Arizona girl deeply moved by the geography of her backyard, the stories of the Grand Canyon sit even deeper within my own heart.

What A WALK IN THE PARK achieves is so much more deeper than a "simple story" about two guys walking through the park. Yes, it is a story about the land (in all it's beautiful iterations and seasons), but it is also a story rooted deeply in the histories of the people who came far before any of us -- who cultivated, cared, and preserved this wonder of the world far before any modern man set his eyes upon it.

It is as much of a story about preservation as it is about change and wonder... and how wonder has the power to change. It is a pondering and a celebrating. A humbling and a growing.

A WALK IN THE PARK is one of the best adventure memoirs I've read in a long time and I'm just so thankful to Simon Books for offering me an early opportunity to read.

Don't miss out on this one friends! It's a fun ride!

A WALK IN THE PARK is out on 5/28!! In the meantime, you can check out Pete and Kevin's adventure via documentary ("Into the Grand Canyon") on National Geographic/ Disney+!
Profile Image for Ken Lindholm.
310 reviews1 follower
September 3, 2024
I have been to the Grand Canyon several times, and twice hiked to the bottom, staying overnight at Phantom Ranch. When A Walk in the Park was published and received favorable reviews, I knew this should be a book for me. The primary focus of author Kevin Fedarko is his 750 mile hike with friend Pete McBride from one end of the Grand Canyon to the other. It’s important to note the trails in the Grand Canyon run primarily from the rim to the river so the vast majority of this hike is off trail, and extremely difficult and dangerous.

Fedarko is a journalist who also has enjoyed spending part of the year on the Colorado River, assisting a tour company carrying visitors through the Grand Canyon. (I’ve found journalists to be excellent writers of nonfiction books because they know how to make their story interesting, and keep it moving along.) Fedarko provides background on the park and the challenges others have faced, both hiking and river running. He is a gifted storyteller who will keep you interested as he discusses the challenges of the hike, past hikers, geology, native tribes of the Canyon, environmental issues, and the potential of future development. Clearly this book was a labor of love for the author.

As supported by the excellent GR ratings, I thought A Walk in the Park was very worthwhile and should be enjoyed by many readers.

Note: I read the Kindle edition, but alternated between my Kindle and the iPad app because there are maps and photographs (black and white, as well as color) that are better viewed on the iPad.
Profile Image for Carrie.
848 reviews32 followers
June 4, 2024
As a newbie hiker with plans to do the AT after retirement, I am enthralled with people who can take me places that I can't go. In fact, I watch more YouTube of hiking than regular tv shows. This one was brought to my attention by Anne Bogel and her Summer Reading Guide for which I will forever be grateful.
This was a fabulous story telling of a hike through the bottom of the Grand Canyon (one I had no idea existed). Fedarko paints such vivid images thru his writing you could see yourself right there. And I will admit that sometimes when books like these incorporate history into them, I will sometimes scan thru those parts. Not with this one. I was just as fascinated with the Indigenous history as with the adventure.
This is a true buddy hiking novel (unlike that disappointment A Walk in the Woods).
Profile Image for Rome Doherty.
622 reviews1 follower
August 6, 2024
I really want to rate this book more highly, as the information about the Canyon in deep and insightful. BUT, I just hate books that expect the reader to admire the unpreparedness, and ignorance of the main characters in the wilderness. Cheryl Strayed book has the same criticism. I don't really need to know you're a doofus.
Profile Image for Maureen Grigsby.
1,171 reviews
April 23, 2025
I thought this was a stellar 5 star book! I grew up in SOUTHERN Arizona, and have always loved the extraordinary national parks and monuments in that state. But I have always remembered how completely stunned I was when I had my first view of the Grand Canyon! It is such a national treasure and Kevin Fedarko beautifully describes the beauty and the danger of that marvelous space. Thank you for writing this book.
Profile Image for Melodi | booksandchicks .
1,018 reviews89 followers
July 11, 2024
First of all, I have a huge place in my heart for canyons, rocks, hiking, landscapes, and nature. So this was basically made for me. I've been the the Grand Canyon a few times, by mule led by my grandpa as a kids, a few hikes down into the canyon a few miles. North and South rims, all the viewpoints...I need to go again. One of these days I will do the rim to rim hike.

Now this book is way beyond that and is about Fedarko and photographer that hiked the CANYON, way more than rim to rim, across, but all the way through starting at Lee's Ferry. Quite the adventure.

I loved all the little details about the indigenous peoples and the effect of tourism on them and the canyon and what has been done over the years. The details about the animals, the flora and fauna. The deaths that have occurred over the years. So many fun details.

At times it did feel a bit laborious, but I listened to it on audio and it meandered back into interesting time. I loved all the afterword info as well.
Profile Image for Nick Bookman.
24 reviews
August 6, 2024
painful. DNF, that’s how you know it’s bad: an audiobook about the outdoors yet I can’t finish it. Dude whipped out his thesaurus and changed every single word he possibly could to make him sound smarter. also, maybe next time have a professional read the audiobook. sorry for the negativity but woof.
Profile Image for Sandra The Old Woman in a Van.
1,397 reviews72 followers
dnf
October 2, 2024
I listened for a couple of hours and looked through the print book, but could not get past my opinion that the author was spinning a story about how unprepared he was for this huge hike. I would rather read Grandma Gatwood's Walk than this tale of mediocrity and annoyance.
Profile Image for Cora Avery.
13 reviews3 followers
August 9, 2024
I absolutely loved this book. I am not a non fiction reader, yet this book contained some of the most detailed and descriptive storytelling, that I was thoroughly engrossed from start to finish. It’s clear in the writing that Kevin has a deeply intimate connection to the canyon, and the intricate way in which he describes the smallest of details demonstrates how intentional and observant he is to the world surrounding him. His beautiful detailing is what truly made this book shine for me- I felt as though I could feel myself lying on a rock, bathing under a vast array of stars and galaxies one can only see in a desert sky devoid of light, and as though I could see the mosaics of reds, browns, yellows and more streaking through rock faces. I was also impressed with his verbiage and voice when referring to the indigenous peoples of the canyon. He does not shy away from fact when discussing atrocities committed by white settlers and people, the federal government, and even the park service. Additionally I thought he balanced amplifying the voices of the people he spoke to, particularly the indigenous women, without drowning it out with his own narrative.
I truly loved this. I had tears on more than one occasion and giggled to myself along the way. I can’t wait to read it again.
Profile Image for Leslie Allred.
159 reviews
May 30, 2025
Took me forever to read because I really wanted to read the physical copy my dad gave me, but wow I loved it. Every time I see the Grand Canyon, I want to cry so I loved being immersed in this adventure as well as learning so much about the cultural and political history and ongoing issues. I want to continue to get in the canyon as much as I can…any walk in the park is a good one.
Profile Image for Carmel Hanes.
Author 1 book172 followers
October 20, 2024
As a person who loves the Grand Canyon and similar glorious natural features, I was curious about those hardy souls who choose to expose themselves to all the harsher/harder elements of that beauty; putting themselves at the mercy of the elements, creepy crawly things, and cactus spines looking for an opportunity to travel with them. I was able to experience their journey from the comfort of my couch.

The book offers a mixture of their own sometimes ill-prepared and ill-fated attempts with the history of those who've always lived near the canyon or who came to conquer it. We learn of the tribes displaced from sacred grounds and their attempts to protect what they love with the government. We hear about those who tried and were met with injury or death. The reader/listener is given an inside view of the difficulty and danger of hiking in such capricious lands, relying on what they can carry or have left at strategic locations. At times I thought them (and those like them) insane, and other times admired their grit.

While it was an interesting journey, I feel no need to replicate it!
56 reviews2 followers
March 15, 2025
FINALLY!! Despite taking forever to finish, I loved this book!! Such a beautiful mix of history and storytelling as these men make their way through the canyon. I have such a newfound appreciation for this awe inspiring park.
“in the hope of standing in the presence of something greater than themselves, something that would enable them to feel profoundly diminished and radically expanded in the same breath.”
“I had come to realize that the canyon is far too complex, too mysterious, too grand, for it to ever be known in full.”
“that humility, like all desert flowers, needs a bit of watering from time to time.”
“May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view.”
Profile Image for Becky.
877 reviews149 followers
July 31, 2025
Fedarko never ceases to amaze me with the breadth of his topics, his compassion for all sides of a story, and the grandeur of the places he brings through the writing. another brilliant work.
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