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Sometimes it really is best to stay inside and read a book.
Sometimes it really is best to stay inside and read a book. (Photo: Andrew Ly/Unsplash)

6 Classic ϳԹ Books We’d Read Again and Again

Spend less than you would on a restaurant dinner and get a book that you'll cherish for years to come

Published: 
Sometimes it really is best to stay inside and read a book.
(Photo: Andrew Ly/Unsplash)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

‘Instant Karma: The Heart and Soul of a Ski Bum’ ($18)

(Courtesy Ghost Road Press)

File by Wayne K. Sheldrake under light reading; Instant Karma is a funny story of a life spent on skis. The author works his way from petty high school theft, lifting skis and forging lift tickets, to a career as aski instructor and an amateur racer. The action takes place mostly at Wolf Creek in Colorado, a small blue-collar mountain that only adds to the story’s charm.


‘The Call of the Wild’ ($6)

(Courtesy CreateSpace Independent Publishing)

This classicis getting the Hollywood treatment,complete with Harrison Ford in a leading role. But read Jack London’s first, which on the surface is about a sled dog going feral to survivebut is really about the author’s own time in Canada’s Yukon. Nobody writes about survival in harsh environments like London.


‘The Longest Run: How a Colorado Ski Bum Skied Every Day for More Than Eight Years’ ($16)

(Courtesy Longest Run Publishing)

You think you’re obsessed with skiing? You ain’t got nothing on , a groomer at Copper Mountain,Colorado, who skied2,993 days in a row. There’s some cool ski history in here, but it’s really a book about obsession gone right as the author searches for snow fromColorado to Mount Hood, Oregon, to South America.


‘Higher Love: Skiing the Seven Summits’ ($15)

(Courtesy Archer)

It only took freeskiing champ two years, from 2004 to 2006, to crisscross the globe and become the first person to climb and ski the seven highest mountains in the world. This memoir details that journey, from crappy skiing conditions at 8,000 metersto DesLauriers’s decision to adopt a wolf pup. The photos from Jimmy Chinthat pepper the book aren’t bad, either.


‘Conquistadors of the Useless: From the Alps to Annapurna’ ($16)

(Courtesy Mountaineers Books)

French mountaineer and author Lionel Terray has first ascents all over the European Alps, the Andes, and the Himalayas. takes a look at his various excursions, the most notable of which were an ascent of Annapurna, in Nepal, and a second ascent of the Eiger, in Switzerland. It’s a classic mountaineering armchair adventure, all underscored by Terray’s notion that the sportis, essentially, useless.


‘Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube: Chasing Fear and Finding Home in the Great White North’ ($16)

(Courtesy Ecco)

Author and ϳԹ contributorBlair Braverman left her home in California for Norwayto study the art of driving sled dogs while also immersing herself in the nuances of Arctic life. She later applied what she learned in Alaska, where she landed a job . The toughest part? The rampant misogyny that pervades the sport’s culture.

Lead Photo: Andrew Ly/Unsplash

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