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Trail Work: Restoring the Paths and Stories of America's Public Lands

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Mapping the past—and the future—of American trails.

"Dillon Osleger is a new voice in the wilderness, and what a voice it is." —Jason Roberts, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Every Living Thing

In Trail Work, Dillon Osleger excavates the forgotten trails of the Western United States. He shows how one of the greatest infrastructure investments in the nation's history—paths through our public lands—has been rubbed away by time and deliberate neglect. Osleger unearths the wagon roads, water sources, trap lines, and Indigenous trading trails that once knitted the West together. He reveals centuries of path building, more than two-thirds of a nationwide network of trails and campgrounds, now erased from the map. Dwindling federal investment and privatized timber forests, ranches, and oil fields have blocked access to public lands, prompting to Osleger to How can we better care for the places that are claimed for the American public, but are too often abandoned or sold? Osleger has trail eyes like no other from his years as a trail builder, geologist, professional mountain biker, and public lands advocate. Here he offers a land ethic born of joy in stewardship, attention to history and community, and living and cycling lightly. From the Central California Coast to the Sierra Nevada, out to Colorado and up to Washington, Osleger embarks on a wayfinder's journey, revealing an atlas of lost trails for everyone who loves the outdoors.

214 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 12, 2026

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Dillon Osleger

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Josh Jackson.
Author 1 book7 followers
May 12, 2026
Trail Work is one of the most thoughtful and emotionally resonant books about public lands I’ve read in a while. Osleger understands that trails are never just lines across a landscape — they are records of memory, labor, migration, stewardship, loss, and belonging. What makes this book so compelling is the way it moves fluidly between geology, history, ecology, cartography, and personal narrative without ever losing sight of the deeper question at its heart: what does it mean to remain connected to a place? Beautifully written and deeply humane, Trail Work belongs in the lineage of writers who understand that conservation begins not only with protection, but with relationship.
Profile Image for Beck Marshall.
24 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
April 21, 2026
The more I read, the more this read grew on me. What started as an obsession on the nature of trails turned into a very thoughtful discourse on land management and how we so often fail to uphold, protect, and repair our public lands. I finished the read, not only eager to work for change, but sharing in Dillon's fascination with the trails themselves
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews