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Bushwhacking

How to Get Lost in the Woods and Write Your Way Out

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

When you stray from a trail and strike out into the woods, you are bushwhacking. The term implies a physical thrashing about—pushing past branches, slicing through thickets, leaping across downed trees—but it also implies a certain fortitude and resilience to seek places unknown. In Bushwhacking, Jennifer McGaha borrows the term, likening it to what writers do when faced with the equally daunting blank page. Exploring the wilderness of your inner life means leaving a relatively comfortable place and going where no path exists. Writers face similar, unknown obstacles when forging a route to a final draft.
Part writing memoir, part nature memoir, and part meditation on a life well lived, Bushwhacking draws on McGaha's experiences running, hiking, biking, paddling, and getting lost across the Appalachian Mountains of western North Carolina to offer readers encouragement and practical suggestions to accompany them on their writing and life journeys. Each essay links one of McGaha's forays into the wilderness to an insight about the creative process. An almost-failed attempt at zip lining becomes a lesson on getting out of one's comfort zone. The thrum of a hummingbird's wings, an autumn sunset, and a hound dog's bay at a bear on the path are impromptu master classes in finding inspiration in the small, the ordinary, and the unexpected.
With humility, humor, and hard-won wisdom, Bushwhacking honors writing craft traditions and offers fresh insights into how close communion with nature can transform your writing and your life.



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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 5, 2022
      These vibrant essays from McGaha (Flat Broke), a creative nonfiction teacher, mix adventure in the Appalachians with discoveries about the creative process. “Every time I went into the woods, I learned something new, something that captivated and inspired me and somehow translated to my writing life,” she relates, sharing how she discovered “magic” in the natural world while zip-lining, mountain biking, and hiking. In a gleefully freewheeling style, she riffs about underestimating the difficulty of mountain biking, complains about camping (“All night long, the wind blew. Coyotes howled and screech owls screeched eerie, haunting sounds”), and is elated while hiking through snow in the Great Smoky Mountains (“We clung to cables as we shimmied down steep, open rock faces in breathtaking wind”). McGaha excels at distilling writing lessons from her wilderness outings, as when she recounts how the words she repeated to herself while navigating a steep downhill course on a mountain bike—“Do not look down. Do not look back or too far ahead. Look three feet in front of you at all times”—became her mantra for approaching a blank page. Gutsy, entertaining, and heartening, McGaha’s dispatches guide and inspire.

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  • English

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