I learned something depressing today: When you type โ€œwomenโ€™s adventure booksโ€ into the Amazon search box, only one of the books on the first page is actually a true tale of a woman making her way in the outdoors. A shockingly high number of the first-page results were more romance novel than stories of bold ventures into the unknown. The good news, though: Weโ€™ve got six hand-picked books right here to help you get inspired for your next trip, or just to enjoy during these long, dark winter nights.

If youโ€™re hungry for more, check out our previous round-up of OR athletesโ€™ favorite womenโ€™s adventure books.ย 

Lands of Lost Borders by Kate Harrisย 

You might pick this book up for its plotโ€”a cycling journey the length of the legendary silk roadโ€”but, odds are, it will be the writing itself that sticks with you. No dry trip journals here. This book asks the big questions about what adventure actually means in our modern age, and fills in the scenes with exquisite detail. This book only came out in 2018, but Iโ€™d wager it will become a classic.

Space Below My Feet by Gwen Moffatย 

If you search โ€œGwen Moffatโ€ on Amazon, youโ€™re as likely to come up with her crime novels as her climbing memoir. While I canโ€™t speak to her mystery books, I can fully vouch for Space Beneath My Feet, which spins the yarn of her dirtbag youthโ€”from driving an army truck to modeling for artists to becoming the first female certified mountain guide in Britain in 1953. Itโ€™s a rough-and-tumble life and might make you want to kick off your shoes and feel your next climbing pitch with your bare feet. ย 

RELATED: Why Midwesterners Make Good Mountaineersย 

Welcome To The Goddamn Ice Cube by Blair Bravermanย 

If youโ€™ve ever felt out of place or uncomfortable as a woman among men in the outdoors, Blair Bravermanโ€™s quest to become a dogsledder might feel familiar. She gives a witty, tender voice to the feelings and experiences of a young woman who aims to become a โ€œtough girl,โ€ pressing herself into the challenges of Alaskaโ€™s wilds and a remote Norwegian village. The complex characters and vivid landscapes she paints will take you on an odyssey, and her course of self discovery will likely have you pumping your fist in solidarity.

Pickets And Dead Men by Bree Loewenย 

Maybe thereโ€™s a theme here. In Bree Loewenโ€™s story about working as a climbing ranger on Mount Rainier, she also fights to prove herself within a system that feels like itโ€™s stacked with bureaucracy and very good at belittling women. If youโ€™ve ever romanticized the life of a ranger, this might help clear up some myths for you. And if youโ€™ve ever dreamed ofโ€”or reminisce aboutโ€”climbing Rainier, this is a behind-the-scenes look of life on the mountain that you wonโ€™t forget.

RELATED: On Climbing andย Listening To Your Inner Voiceย 

The Living Mountain by Nan Shepherdย 

This book might be small in sizeโ€”at barely over 100 pagesโ€”but itโ€™s deep in quality and thought. The author writes in precise sensual detail about her home rangeโ€”Scotlandโ€™s Cairngormsโ€”and is an inspiration for how, over time one can get to know a wild place intimately. In Shepherdโ€™s case, that intimacy comes from a lifetime of walkingโ€”giving up peak bagging for a more thorough experience of wandering. Her book might inspire you to get to know your own backyard a little better.

Rock Queen by Catherine Destivelleย 

One of the worldโ€™s first female sponsored climbers, Catherine Destivelle pushed limits in more ways than one. From sneaking out as a teen to climb at Fontainebleau to putting up gnarly first ascents in the Alps, her story is full of riveting climbs and fascinating personal details. Her account of her 11-day solo quest up a new route on the west face of the Dru will either make you shudder or inspire you to try something hard in the mountains yourself. Probably both. (Copies of this book are more tough to come byโ€”but if you can't find one, or an affordable one to buy, the American Alpine Club Library ownsย a copy. So if you're a member, you can always reserve it and have it sent to you!)

Back to blog

Explore More