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Wild (Easton Press Signed Collector's Edition)

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Wild (Easton Press Signed Collector's Edition)

Wild (Easton Press Signed Collector's Edition)

STRAYED, Cheryl. Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail. Norwalk, Connecticut: The Easton Press, 2015.

Octavo. Full burgundy leather. Spine with four raised bands, 22-carat gilt accents. Cover with gilt mountain scene. All edges gilt. Moiré silk endpapers. Satin ribbon page marker. 315 pp. Signed Collector's Edition. Signed by the author on the special dedication page tipped in by the publisher. Includes signed Certificate of Authenticity, edition card, and bookplate adhered to front endpaper. Originally published New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2012.

In the spring of 1995, Cheryl Strayed was twenty-six years old, recently divorced, intermittently using heroin, and four years on from the death of her mother from lung cancer at forty-five — a loss from which she had not recovered and did not know how to recover. On something between an impulse and a conviction she decided to hike the Pacific Crest Trail alone. She had never backpacked before. She bought a pack so large and heavy that she could barely lift it, filled it with equipment she had never used, and set out from the Mojave Desert with the intention of walking north for eleven hundred miles to the Oregon-Washington border. She called the pack "Monster."

Wild, published in 2012, is the account of those ninety-four days. It is simultaneously a travel memoir, a grief memoir, and a memoir of self-reconstruction — the story of what happened to Strayed on the trail, and the story, told in counterpoint, of everything that had happened to her before she got there. Her mother's illness and death, her own marriage and its dissolution, the period of dissolution that followed — all of it is rendered with a directness and emotional precision that made the book an immediate bestseller and an Oprah's Book Club selection. It spent years on the New York Times bestseller list and has sold millions of copies worldwide.

The Pacific Crest Trail runs from the Mexican border at Campo, California, to the Canadian border at Manning Park, British Columbia — 2,650 miles in total. Strayed hiked the central section, through the Sierra Nevada and the Cascade Range, alone, often without other hikers for days at a time, through snow and desert and the particular silence of the high country. What the walk did to her, and what she came to understand through it, is not reducible to a formula; the book resists the consolation of the transformative journey narrative even as it tells one, and that resistance is what has given it its durability. The 2014 film adaptation directed by Jean-Marc Vallée, with Reese Witherspoon in the lead role and a screenplay by Nick Hornby, brought the story to a further audience while leaving the book entirely intact as the primary work.

Fine. Presenting as new.

This book is currently not on display in store. If you would like more information or to arrange a viewing, please contact: [email protected]

Catalogue Number: HH000499

$23.75

Original: $67.85

-65%
Wild (Easton Press Signed Collector's Edition)—

$67.85

$23.75

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STRAYED, Cheryl. Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail. Norwalk, Connecticut: The Easton Press, 2015.

Octavo. Full burgundy leather. Spine with four raised bands, 22-carat gilt accents. Cover with gilt mountain scene. All edges gilt. Moiré silk endpapers. Satin ribbon page marker. 315 pp. Signed Collector's Edition. Signed by the author on the special dedication page tipped in by the publisher. Includes signed Certificate of Authenticity, edition card, and bookplate adhered to front endpaper. Originally published New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2012.

In the spring of 1995, Cheryl Strayed was twenty-six years old, recently divorced, intermittently using heroin, and four years on from the death of her mother from lung cancer at forty-five — a loss from which she had not recovered and did not know how to recover. On something between an impulse and a conviction she decided to hike the Pacific Crest Trail alone. She had never backpacked before. She bought a pack so large and heavy that she could barely lift it, filled it with equipment she had never used, and set out from the Mojave Desert with the intention of walking north for eleven hundred miles to the Oregon-Washington border. She called the pack "Monster."

Wild, published in 2012, is the account of those ninety-four days. It is simultaneously a travel memoir, a grief memoir, and a memoir of self-reconstruction — the story of what happened to Strayed on the trail, and the story, told in counterpoint, of everything that had happened to her before she got there. Her mother's illness and death, her own marriage and its dissolution, the period of dissolution that followed — all of it is rendered with a directness and emotional precision that made the book an immediate bestseller and an Oprah's Book Club selection. It spent years on the New York Times bestseller list and has sold millions of copies worldwide.

The Pacific Crest Trail runs from the Mexican border at Campo, California, to the Canadian border at Manning Park, British Columbia — 2,650 miles in total. Strayed hiked the central section, through the Sierra Nevada and the Cascade Range, alone, often without other hikers for days at a time, through snow and desert and the particular silence of the high country. What the walk did to her, and what she came to understand through it, is not reducible to a formula; the book resists the consolation of the transformative journey narrative even as it tells one, and that resistance is what has given it its durability. The 2014 film adaptation directed by Jean-Marc Vallée, with Reese Witherspoon in the lead role and a screenplay by Nick Hornby, brought the story to a further audience while leaving the book entirely intact as the primary work.

Fine. Presenting as new.

This book is currently not on display in store. If you would like more information or to arrange a viewing, please contact: [email protected]

Catalogue Number: HH000499