A Field Guide to Getting Lost

Front Cover
Viking, 2005 - Art - 209 pages
With such acclaimed books as "River of Shadows" and "Wanderlust," activist and cultural historian Rebecca Solnit has emerged as one of the most original and penetrating writers at work today. Her brilliant new book, "A Field Guide to Getting Lost," is about the stories we use to navigate our way through the world and the places we traverse, from wilderness to cities, in finding ourselves or losing ourselves. Written as a series of autobiographical essays, it draws on emblematic moments and relationships in Solnitas own life to explore issues of uncertainty, trust, loss, memory, desire, and place. While deeply personal, Solnitas book is not just a memoir, since her own stories link up with everything from the captivity narratives of early American immigrants to endangered species to the use of the color blue in Renaissance paintinganot to mention encounters with tortoises, monks, punk rockers, mountains, deserts, and the movie "Vertigo," The result is a distinctive, stimulating voyage of discovery that only a writer of Solnitas caliber and curiosity could produce, a book that will appeal not only to her growing legion of admirers but also to the readers of Anne Lamott, Diane Ackerman, and Annie Dillard.

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About the author (2005)

Rebecca Solnit writes extensively on photography and landscape. She is a contributing editor to Art Issues and Creative Camera and is the author of three books. She has contributed essays to several museum catalogues including Crimes and Splendors: The Desert Cantos of Richard Misrach and the Whitney Museum's Beat Culture and the New America. She was a 1993 recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship.