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"A layered inquisition and a reportorial force…a technicolor
mystery.... In prose that moves like a clear river....Rustad has
done what the best storytellers do: tried to track the story to its
last twig and then stepped aside.”— New York Times Book
Review In the vein of Jon Krakauer's Into the Wild, a riveting work
of narrative nonfiction centering on the unsolved disappearance of
an American backpacker in India—one of at least two dozen
tourists who have met a similar fate in the remote and storied
Parvati Valley. For centuries, India has enthralled westerners
looking for an exotic getaway, a brief immersion in yoga and
meditation, or in rare cases, a true pilgrimage to find spiritual
revelation. Justin Alexander Shetler, an inveterate traveler
trained in wilderness survival, was one such seeker. In his early
thirties Justin Alexander Shetler, quit his job at a tech startup
and set out on a global journey: across the United States by
motorcycle, then down to South America, and on to the Philippines,
Thailand, and Nepal, in search of authentic experiences and
meaningful encounters, while also documenting his travels on
Instagram. His enigmatic character and magnetic personality gained
him a devoted following who lived vicariously through his
adventures. But the ever restless explorer was driven to pursue
ever greater challenges, and greater risks, in what had become a
personal quest—his own hero’s journey. In 2016, he made his way
to the Parvati Valley, a remote and rugged corner of the Indian
Himalayas steeped in mystical tradition yet shrouded in darkness
and danger. There, he spent weeks studying under the guidance of a
sadhu, an Indian holy man, living and meditating in a cave. At the
end of August, accompanied by the sadhu, he set off on a
“spiritual journey” to a holy lake—a journey from which he
would never return. Lost in the Valley of Death is about one
man’s search to find himself, in a country where for many
westerners the path to spiritual enlightenment can prove fraught,
even treacherous. But it is also a story about all of us and the
ways, sometimes extreme, we seek fulfillment in life. Lost in the
Valley of Death includes 16 pages of color photographs.
In the tradition of John Vaillant's modern classic The Golden
Spruce comes a story of the unlikely survival of one of the largest
and oldest trees in Canada. On a cool morning in the winter of
2011, a logger named Dennis Cronin was walking through a stand of
old-growth forest near Port Renfrew on Vancouver Island. He came
across a massive Douglas fir the height of a twenty-storey
building. Instead of allowing the tree to be felled, he tied a
ribbon around the trunk, bearing the words "Leave Tree." The forest
was cut but the tree was saved. The solitary Douglas fir, soon
known as Big Lonely Doug, controversially became the symbol of
environmental activists and their fight to protect the region's
dwindling old-growth forests. Originally featured as a long-form
article in The Walrus that garnered a National Magazine Award
(Silver), Big Lonely Doug weaves the ecology of old-growth forests,
the legend of the West Coast's big trees, the turbulence of the
logging industry, the fight for preservation, the contention
surrounding ecotourism, First Nations land and resource rights, and
the fraught future of these ancient forests around the story of a
logger who saved one of Canada's last great trees.
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