Canoeing


Canoeing with the Cree
The River
Where the Falcon Flies: A 3,400 Kilometre Odyssey From My Doorstep to the Arctic
Canoescapes
The Survival of the Bark Canoe
The Singing Wilderness
Paddle to the Amazon: The Ultimate 12,000-Mile Canoe Adventure
Path of the Paddle
Deliverance
Song of the Paddle: An Illustrated Guide to Wilderness Camping
Canoes: A Natural History in North America (Posthumanities)
Fire in the Bones: Bill Mason and the Canadian Canoeing Tradition
Wilderness Rivers of Manitoba
Goodbye to a River: A Narrative
Houndsley and Catina Plink and Plunk (Houndsley and Catina, #4)
Migrations by Charlotte McConaghyIn the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel PhilbrickThe Natural Navigator by Tristan GooleyTwo Years Before the Mast by Richard Henry Dana Jr.Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
Boat Club Book Club
93 books — 6 voters

Diver's Heart by K.A. KnightDeep End by Ali HazelwoodSettling the Score by R.S. GreyAttraction by Penny ReidWhere We Belong by Eve Connell
Sports in the Water Romance Style
108 books — 12 voters
Stumbling Thru by A. Digger StolzThe Disallowed by Owen  JonesA Walk in the Woods by Bill BrysonThe Complete Walker IV by Colin FletcherOn Celtic Tides by Chris Duff
Backpacking & Paddling Books
108 books — 79 voters

Downriver by Will HobbsBrian's Return by Gary PaulsenCrabbe by William BellRiver Thunder by Will HobbsGhost Canoe by Will Hobbs
YA & Middle Grade Rafting/Canoeing
36 books — 5 voters
Squib by Nina BowdenSchizo by Nic SheffHistory Is All You Left Me by Adam SilveraBridge to Terabithia by Katherine PatersonOn My Honor by Marion Dane Bauer
Drownings in Juvenile Fiction
107 books — 6 voters

Aldo Leopold
Wilderness areas are first of all a series of sanctuaries for the primitive arts of wilderness travel, especially canoeing and packing. I suppose some will wish to debate whether it is important to keep these primitive arts alive. I shall not debate it. Either you know it in your bones, or you are very, very old.
Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac and Sketches Here and There

Kim Trevathan
From the Introduction to Coldhearted River: A Canoe Odyssey Down the Cumberland: As I read about the Cumberland before the trip and began to scout it, its distinct personality began to emerge. It was colder, in a literal and figurative sense, than the Tennessee. Long stretches were empty, desolate, antisocial. It seemed haunted, distant, aloof, while the Tennessee was warm, embracing, pliant. The Tennessee was the friendly sister, close to my age, perhaps older, the Cumberland the younger one w ...more
Kim Trevathan, Coldhearted River: A Canoe Odyssey Down the Cumberland

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