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To the Gorge

Running, Grief, Resilience & 460 Miles on the Pacific Crest Trail

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
When Emily Halnon lost her beloved mother to a rare uterine cancer at just sixty-six years old, she wanted to do something monumental to honor the person her mother had been. Emily's mom had taken up running in her late forties; she ran her first marathon at fifty. She even went skydiving to celebrate her sixtieth birthday.
Emily, already an accomplished ultrarunner, decided to try to break the record for the Fastest Known Time by a woman on the Pacific Crest Trail's 460 miles across Oregon.
To the Gorge takes the listener through her seven days, nineteen hours, and twenty-three minutes on the trail, covering nearly sixty miles a day on foot over rugged terrain, and battling all the issues that could arise during such a monstrous undertaking. All the while, she simultaneously struggles with how to get through the profound grief of losing her mom.
Interwoven with Halnon's eight-day effort are her remembrances from her mother's life and death, exploring the complicated experience of grief—and what shines through it.
Filled with adventure and heart, To the Gorge invites listeners to consider what our greatest losses can teach us about how to live the one life we get.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 4, 2024
      In this affecting debut memoir, athlete and essayist Halnon resolves to run across Oregon on the Pacific Crest Trail after her mother dies of cancer. Halnon’s mother, Andrea, lived out her later years as a “running, walking, biking billboard for physical fitness,” until she was diagnosed with a rare uterine cancer in her early 60s. At 66, she entered the final stages of the disease. Halnon decided to pay tribute to her mother’s tenacity by not only crossing the Beaver State on foot, but by doing it faster than anyone ever had. It was no small goal: at 460 miles, the distance nearly quintupled her longest continuous run, and the Pacific Northwest rains promised to be unforgiving. Despite the long odds, Halnon pulled it off, running the route in just over a week, beating all previously recorded paces. While pulse-pounding descriptions of Halnon’s athletic feats will be catnip for adrenaline junkies, what makes this sing is the author’s remarkably clear-eyed approach to loss: “I knew my attempts to outrun my own grief would be futile,” she writes. “I’d learned many times that... trying to avoid it is its own purgatory.” Halnon’s unflinching gaze elevates this above the crowded field of memoirs about losing a loved one. Agent: Stephanie Evans, Ayesha Pande Literary.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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