The definitive biography of Everett Ruess, the artist, writer, and
eloquent celebrator of the wilderness whose bold solo explorations of
the American West and mysterious disappearance in the Utah desert at
age twenty have earned him a large and devoted cult following.
“Easily one of [Roberts’s] best . . . thoughtful and passionate .
. . a compelling portrait of the Ruess myth.”—Outside Wandering
alone with burros and pack horses through California and the Southwest
for five years in the early 1930s, on voyages lasting as long as ten
months, Ruess became friends with photographers Edward Weston and
Dorothea Lange, swapped prints with Ansel Adams, took part in a Hopi
ceremony, learned to speak Navajo, and was among the first "outsiders"
to venture deeply into what was then (and to some extent still is)
largely a little-known wilderness. When he vanished without a trace in
November 1934, Ruess left behind thousands of pages of journals,
letters, and poems, as well as more than a hundred watercolor
paintings and blockprint engravings. Everett Ruess is hailed as a
paragon of solo exploration, while the mystery of his death remains
one of the greatest riddles in the annals of American adventure. David
Roberts began probing the life and death of Everett Ruess for National
Geographic Adventure magazine in 1998. Finding Everett Ruess is the
result of his personal journeys into the remote areas explored by
Ruess, his interviews with oldtimers who encountered the young
vagabond and with Ruess’s closest living relatives, and his deep
immersion in Ruess’s writings and artwork. More than seventy-five
years after his vanishing, Ruess stirs the kinds of passion and
speculation accorded such legendary doomed American adventurers as
Into the Wild’s Chris McCandless and Amelia Earhart.
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The Life and Unsolved Disappearance of a Legendary Wilderness Explorer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780307591784
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter