
Category: book register
2017 Hiker Book Register: a place for hikers to offer the title of books that have “dated a new era in [their] life.” Book list (sorted by date entered in the register) is the last post in this category, published January 2, 2018.
First entry in Hiker Book Register
We had our first entry in the Hiker Book Register:
The hiker who penned this (trail name: Attrition) is part-way through a Coast to Coast Triple Crown hike. Check out his fascinating blog at http://attritionhike.com.
Updates to Little Free Library for 2017
I removed half a row of donated books and replaced it with self-printed copies of Thoreau’s Walden (complete), a tiny-print and large-print version Walt Whitman’s ‘Song of Myself’ (probably the most iconic poem from Leaves of Grass), and a single-page poem, ‘Ithaka,’ by C. P. Cavafy, about journeys, that I thought might stand up to multiple readings as thru hikers reflect on their own journeys. I had hoped to finish and print up copies of my self-penned pamphlet ‘Guide to the flora and fauna of Table Mountain,’ but I just can’t seem to find time to complete it.

In addition to offering reading material for hikers, I have added a new twist on the trail register. This combines the “sign and date it”-type register typified by the 2016 Surfboard Trail Register with the “share your thoughts about water caches” 2015 Comments Notebook. For 2017, I am asking visitors: “Is there a book that has ‘dated a new era in your life’? Share the title and a few sentences about its significance to you in this notebook for those who come after you on their journey.”
I offered the first entry:
January 1, 2017
I guess I’ll start, since this was my idea. A book that has ‘dated a new era in my life’ is Thoreau’s Walden. (Actually, this is a paraphrase from Walden. — The actual quote is: “How many a man has dated a new era in his life from the reading of a book!”) I was spared having Walden murdered in a high school English class, and only encountered the book as an 18-year-old, independently of any course. It spoke to a growing sense I had that too many people were living their lives on auto-pilot, unable to see the choices they were making as choices. — An authentic human life needed to remain off of the auto-pilot of societal roles, leaving the individual to encounter each choice point with the question “Whither?” I re-read Walden in December 2016 — the first time in ~25 years — and I can only vaguely remember myself as that 18-year-old who was so profoundly affected by this work. I admit to being a bit disappointed by it now. It seemed almost juvenile. Like all life-changing encounters with art, my 18-year-old self was changed in the encounter and internalized the work, so that I am now unable to return to that naive state of my first encounter with Walden.
— PCT 145 Trail Angel Mary



