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Leave Only Footprints: My Acadia-to-Zion Journey Through Every National Park

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From the Emmy-winning CBS Sunday Morning correspondent, an entertaining chronicle of his year spent traveling to every one of our National Parks, including his experiences with some of the most beautiful places--and most interesting people--that America has to offer.

When Conor Knighton decided to spend a year wandering through "America's Best Idea," he was worried the whole thing might end up being his worst idea. But, after a broken engagement and a broken heart, he desperately needed a change of scenery. The ambitious plan he cooked up went a bit overboard in that department; Knighton set out to visit every single one of America's National Parks, from Acadia to Zion.

Leave Only Footprints is the memoir of his year spent traveling across the United States, a journey that yielded his "On the Trail" series, which quickly became one of CBS Sunday Morning's most beloved segments. In this smart, informative, and often hilarious book, he'll share how his journey through these natural wonders, unchanged by man, ended up changing his worldview on everything from God to politics to love and technology. Whether it's waking up early for a naked scrub in an Arkansas bathhouse or staying up late to stargaze along our loneliest highway, Knighton goes behind the scenery to provide an unfiltered look at America. In the tradition of books like A Walk in the Woods or Turn Right at Machu Picchu, this is an irresistible mix of personal narrative and travelogue-some well-placed pop culture references, too-and a must-read for any of the 331 million yearly National Parks visitors.

323 pages, Hardcover

First published April 7, 2020

About the author

Conor Knighton

2 books143 followers
Conor Knighton is an Emmy-winning correspondent for CBS Sunday Morning, America's #1 Sunday morning news program. Depending on your cable package, you may have also seen him hosting shows on Current TV, AMC, and Bio Channel or providing commentary for the likes of MTV, E!, and CNN. He has been to all of our national parks and what feels like 40% of our Hampton Inns.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,453 reviews
Profile Image for Mark Baker.
2,215 reviews167 followers
May 14, 2020
When Conor Knighton’s fiancée left him, he wasn’t sure quite what to do until he saw a promotion talking about the National Park’s 100th anniversary. Soon, he was making plans to visit all of the official National Parks in 2016, reporting on some of them for CBS Sunday Morning. After experiencing sunrise on New Year’s Day in Acadia, he crisscrossed the country numerous times in his quest to experience all of them.

When I first heard about this book, I was intrigued. I’ve long wanted to visit all of the parks myself, not that I’ve done much more than think about it. When this book focuses on the parks and some of their history, it is fascinating. The writing is excellent, and it is easy to feel you are right next to him as he experiences the parks. However, at times he gets distracted trying to push an agenda on us, and when that happens, the parks get shafted. A few of the parks he barely describes, focusing instead on the bad he feels needs to be fixed or pointing out the bad in the past that has been fixed. Even when I agreed with his point, I found this frustrating because it’s not what I wanted to read about when I picked up the book. He definitely made me want to visit several of the parks as soon as I can. His brief stories about his life and his stories about the people he met along the way were fun and fascinating. There are two inserts of pictures from his journey; I would have loved more, but I enjoyed what we got. I wish the book had focused more on the parks themselves. Then it would have been fantastic.

Read my full review at Carstairs Considers.
Profile Image for Carmine.
456 reviews24 followers
September 2, 2020
I liked reading about the parks, but this weird break up story narrative he chose to frame it with wasn’t interesting and took up too many pages that were then not about the parks. If you were looking for interesting travel writing about our great national treasure, the NPS, just know you are going to have to slog through a lot of Tinder swiping, descriptions of his Tinder photos and cute girls he meets on his travels. I need a rewrite of this book by a middle age woman who has no Fs left to give for that sort of thing and who likes to geek out on NPS history and hiking (and botany, geology, zoology, etc.)
Profile Image for Rachel Reece.
251 reviews
February 29, 2020
Highly recommend!!! Oh my gosh it left me energized and excited to adventure and jealous of his nomadic lifestyle and career. Left me wanting to read more about every one of the 56 parks he went to -- and experience them myself. Definitely not the kind of hard-core adventure book I was expecting; it's more in the vein of A Walk in the Woods and reads like a series of short articles. Knighton is a romantic and an engaging storyteller.
482 reviews9 followers
August 5, 2020
I would have preferred If the author told us/mentioned just once, about his break up.

Don’t care about his love life...his Tinder dates, his serendipitous meetings with beautiful women.

Don’t care what vacations he took as a 10 yo.

I wanna hear about his National Park experiences, and the history behind the parks. As I reflect back on the book, I realize that I don’t think I learned anything, or anything much. The author really doesn’t write much about a park. He mentions some just in passing (Olympic), but really just mentions the name. Tetons...what did he do there (besides, hunting down a beautiful woman)?

I already know all about TR (and if he’s going to tell TR outdoorsy stories, wish he’d have told my favorite), know about Dr. Mudd, about Muir...and know or have been to most all (that are accessible) in the western half the the US.

I don’t mean that as a brag, but my point is...this book is for people who aren’t outdoorsy, who haven’t traveled to Parks and/or people who don’t know history.
Profile Image for Julie  Durnell.
1,082 reviews195 followers
August 22, 2020
I thoroughly enjoyed traveling along with Conor Knighton to all the National Parks he visited in a year for CBS. The book is not laid out alphabetical or by region and while this is different I had no problem criss crossing the country (and even out of the country in American Samoa) and meeting the interesting people that he interviewed. Although he was in the process of healing from a broken relationship ending almost at the alter and wrote quite a bit about that, I did not find it distracting. It seemed to help know him better and empathize with his broken heart. Included are beautiful pictures that bring perspective to the places he visited. Recommended!
Profile Image for Deb (Readerbuzz) Nance.
6,079 reviews307 followers
May 19, 2020
We forget, but there are lots of ways to read a book.

I read a book last week. It was an immersive experience.

The book is Leave Only Footprints: My Acadia-to-Zion Journey Through Every National Park. It was written by Conor Knighton who undertook the journey to visit all fifty-nine* American national parks in a year. He filmed segments for CBS Sunday Morning along the way.

Happily, I found all twenty-four of the segments available online: On the Trail: CBS Sunday Morning.

I'd read a chapter, and then I'd watch a segment.

National parks I've visited, like Yosemite and Yellowstone and Bryce Canyon and Crater Lake and Big Bend. Many more I wanted to visit and hadn't yet, like Smokey Mountain and Everglades and Glacier and Arches. Even more that I'd never heard of and didn't realize I wanted to visit, like Congaree and Dry Tortugas and Indiana Dunes.

What a great way to read a book. What a great way to visit all the national parks. I didn't even leave any footprints.

*Note: There are now sixty-two national parks, with the addition of three new parks since 2016 when this book was written and the segments filmed.
Profile Image for Neil Capper.
3 reviews
February 21, 2021
I had high hopes for this book as an avid Parks fan. Although I spent a fair bit of time in the parks growing up, I fell back in love with them myself during the 2016 centennial and have visited over 200 park units in the last 5 years. I was excited to learn someone made a trip like this in a single year and wrote a book about the experience, but it quickly became apparent the story was more about the author's attempt at rebuilding his own personal life and finding a relationship. The story just happens to take place against the backdrop of the National Parks rather than one dedicated to the Parks themselves or the centennial of the Park Service.

There are a lot of quick stories and facts included about the parks the author visits, which I found captivating when they were discussed, but as the book progressed this narrative was regularly interrupted by his descriptions of Tinder swiping and serial dating. These thoughts sometimes were a lone sentence but at times consumed paragraphs detailing the swiping, the dates, and his thoughts about pursuing them all, but also his dissatisfaction with all of those things. For whatever reason, he continued pursuing them for most of the trip and then felt to include the details in this book. This reached peak creepy for me when he tracked down a woman in Jackson Hole on his last park of the year, ostensibly to thank her for helping him get his car pulled out of a snowbank, but really to ask her on a date. When he found out she was engaged he writes about his hopes being dashed because it would have been a great love story, but ultimately decides to stop being distracted and to get back on track with his park journey.

Many parks aren't discussed in detail at all, such as the Grand Tetons (which has an uplifting creation story in itself), because while he was at the Tetons he spent pages describing trying to get there and then pursuing a woman once he arrived. The park itself was never discussed.

Had the author focused on the parks and telling their stories during his entire trip, this would have been a 5 star book.
Profile Image for Ali.
5 reviews
March 17, 2020
I had the lucky chance to pick up an advance copy at work. It was on our shelf, and something about it called out to me.

It was the perfect book for me to read right now. I'm currently going through a challenging part of my life, and have set a goal for myself- travel the country and see many of our amazing national parks. I will admit, I'm not aiming for EVERY one in a year, like Conor achieved, but I do have 19 stops on my list (and counting.)

This book is not what I expected. I thought it would be more of a guide- here's each park, and what I did there! If you're looking for that, there are other books. No, this book is a story- both of Conor's personal and physical journey, but also of some history of the parks, and the different elements that connects them. It was unexpected, but incredibly moving. Conor perfectly weaves a beautiful narrative, that was motivational, and moving to read. I could hardly put it down.
Profile Image for Chelsea.
198 reviews30 followers
April 20, 2020
I liked this book, even if it just made my wanderlust and claustrophobia from being stuck at home that much worse. There are tons of interesting stories and tidbits I picked up, like the pioneering parkitecture of Mary Colter at the Grand Canyon or the mysterious"Old Man" of Crater Lake. And of course, like any American outdoorsy book, it is peppered with plenty of John Muir and Teddy Roosevelt quotes. Some of the stories are quite funny too, especially the bears at Katmai.

But I didn't love the book. Some parks got interesting stories (whether historical, ecological, or Knighton's personal), but many parks received short shrift. Acadia is mentioned for its claim as the "first sunrise of the year", but otherwise nothing. Olympic is only discussed in relation to a story about needing a cell phone, which turns into a longer piece on cell service and connectedness throughout the parks. Interesting, but I still wanted to hear about Olympic itself. With 56 parks to go through in one year and one book, it's understandable that there just isn't enough time/ room to go into every park in detail. But disappointing nonetheless.

Overall, the humor and writing style had more misses than hits for me, filled with pat jokes and bad lines (like "America's parks really do shine from sea to sea"). After every section, I can almost hear him saying "Now back to you, Tom!", like the TV reporter he is. Knighton is definitely not the next Bill Bryson. His writing at times feels heavily influencing by blogging and on-air TV personalities, in that carefully calculated confessional style that makes you think they're being open and honest about their lives, but feels like another mask. It's the "trying to appeal and seem relatable to the largest audience possible" that makes him feel a little fake and, honestly, boring. Travel books like this one that are centered around the person traveling, rather than the destination, needs a narrator who isn't afraid to be unlikable, foolish, and neurotic at times. It makes for better stories. Otherwise, it feels like watching your friend's vacation photos and hearing their anecdotes, fun for a bit, but not riveting.
Profile Image for Cindy Burnett (Thoughts from a Page).
618 reviews1,057 followers
November 17, 2020
In this non-fiction gem, Knighton chronicles the year he spent traveling to every national park in the United States. The parks are grouped by theme instead of location which works surprisingly well, and the book is interspersed with humor and intriguing details about each of the parks. Knighton highlights the importance of our national parks, how various parks received their designations, and how climate change and over-visiting is impacting many of these beautiful places. In the Epilogue, Knighton discusses how the National Park System continues to expand and quickly reviews the three parks that have achieved the designation after 2016 (the year Knighton made his journey). Most importantly, Knighton demonstrates that “national parks have become our collective sanctuaries”; this book is such a fascinating and beautiful read and will certainly make my top ten list for 2020.

Listen to my podcast at https://www.thoughtsfromapage.com for fun author interviews. For more book reviews, check out my Instagram account: https://www.instagram.com/thoughtsfro....
212 reviews2 followers
August 28, 2020
Saw this book in our library's new issues section and thought it sounded like a worth while read. I am a huge fan of our National Parks having visited 21 to date. Peaked my interest for sure.

On the very first page, three paragraphs in, "four dead presidents carved into granite" describing Mt Rushmore, should have been the canary in the coal mine.

The tone of the book was odd. It morphed into a series of rants rather than focusing on the parks themselves. I was expecting history, a little geography and hopefully some interesting and fun facts about each park.
Instead, the book digresses into immigration issues in Big Bend, global warming in Glacier and women's rights in the Grand Canyon.
Yosemite is certainly one of the jewels of the NP system. Yosemite was summed up in a page and a half of not so interesting info.

What I thought would be an excellent read turned out to be essentially the authors rants. Once I read his bio and journalism experience, I understood why.

Pulled the plug on this dismal effort after the chapter on women's rights in the grand canyon.
Profile Image for Charlene.
975 reviews104 followers
November 7, 2022
I enjoyed this but it wasn't quite what I was expecting . . . there's little depth here but since this was a one year speed trip through 60+ parks, that's understandable. It's as much a story about a young journalist's life (project's catalyst was a broken engagement) as it is about the parks themselves. Also a bit about American culture/attitudes to the parks; it isn't the travelogue that I probably would have preferred.

I've been to 20 of the national parks; stayed overnight in 16 of them but I didn't see that our visits to the same parks resonated with me in any way. Most memorable parks in the book were Acadia, Olympic, Isle Royale, and the Alaskan parks (and I think were the ones he spent the most time in, also). Most frightening thing from the book was how park attendance is skyrocketing (with no funding increases); the descriptions of Zion's crowded trails was frightening and a very different experience than what I had on my visit there decades ago.

3.5 rating; glad I read this.

Profile Image for Jeremy.
636 reviews32 followers
September 20, 2020


A little bit about the parks, a lot about the author’s navel-gazing reflections on his own love life and his left-wing, white privileged angst.

He laments, “even when you take income and geography into consideration, the parks still aren’t as [racially] diverse as they could be or should be.” Who is this bozo to say how things “should” be? What if minorities are less interested in going to the parks? What if some people prefer the indoors to the outdoors? What if Korean-Americans are less interested in lacrosse and ice hockey than Native Americans and Russian-Americans? Is that okay with this guy, or can it only mean that some pernicious form of discrimination is at play?

Isn’t it actually racist to suggest that minorities should have the same interests and with the same degree of intensity as the white author of this book? Can he not imagine that others might be different from him based on their cultural values and interests?

He puts the cherry on the self-loathing sundae by saying, “Inclusivity is a moral imperative.” No one I know has wasted any time trying to exclude minorities from the national parks, so where is the crisis? How is this a moral issue? It’s not, it’s just an opportunity for this guy to find some value in pretending to hold the moral high ground. We’re all impressed, man. You are so very virtuous for noticing this terrible injustice and taking action to bring about justice by writing about it. We are all in your debt.

Now I just have to find a book about the national parks that’s actually about the national parks.
Profile Image for Jess.
209 reviews5 followers
May 30, 2020
Really enjoyed this book. I’ve always been a huge National Parks fan and truly believe they’re right when they say the National Parks were America’s best idea.

Teddy Roosevelt found himself in American wilderness when it seemed as though everything was lost. So many of us go to nature to help us persevere when we feel like we cannot go on. I certainly do.

Knighton provides a beautiful look into American National Parks. He interweaves his own outlooks and experiences, such as grieving the breakup with his fiancé and staring down the barrel of unemployment. He is definitely a hopeless romantic and it brings an unexpected element to the storytelling.

We all wish the moments of nature could be a little bit longer and Knighton allows us to revel in them through his eyes.
Profile Image for Laura Hoffman Brauman.
2,778 reviews42 followers
April 12, 2020
What an absolutely perfect way to spend an evening. Knighton visited 59 national parks in a year and wrote about the experience. I loved the way he structured it - not in the order he visited them or their geographic location, but by themes that connected them. Mystery, God, Sound, People, etc -- it was a really effective way to highlight how connected places that might seem dissimilar can be. For the parks I have already visited, it brought back wonderful memories. For the ones that I haven't, I got to do a little armchair travel as I added them to my bucket list.
Profile Image for Kelly K.
1,943 reviews13 followers
August 17, 2020
I have had the strongest sense of wanderlust while reading this book. Absolutely loved it. 10/10 would recommend.
Profile Image for Jenny.
718 reviews7 followers
April 10, 2022
Conor Knighton offers unique stories about visiting all of the National Parks (at least all that were in existence at the time of publication) in a single year. He groups the Parks together based on themes such as Ice, Light, and Canyons as well as ones you wouldn't necessarily think of such as Forgiveness or Food. I found myself wanting more in depth stories about many of the parks as several barely got a mention in their chapters. However, I understand that to do each park justice would require a much heftier book.
Recommended for Park lovers.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
812 reviews
September 13, 2021
I would love to spend a year visiting all of the National Parks, as this CBS correspondent did. I like how he chose to group them in categories, like Caves, Ice and Volcanoes. I learned some interesting tidbits about a lot of the parks.
Profile Image for Allison.
497 reviews
September 12, 2020
4.5 stars.
I just really enjoyed this book—such a delight! I had the opportunity to visit a couple of the national parks Conor talks about, and his stories reignited my desire to visit as many as possible. I think that desire is fueled by the lack of traveling we’re able to do right now in this pandemic! There was/is such a level of peace found, being in nature, and this makes me excited for when I’m able to do that again! I loved that he shared his own personal journey, and found all the historical facts he included so interesting!
Profile Image for Frosty61 .
937 reviews22 followers
October 8, 2020
4.5 stars rounded up.
To the author: Thank you for including a rudimentary map for those of us who might not know the locations of each park - very useful and much appreciated.

For someone who believes strongly in nature therapy, this one is an enjoyable read. It inspires the reader to get outside and explore in order to truly value and respect the treasures that are our National Parks. Instead of a linear timeline, the author grouped the parks by physical or emotional characteristics that resonated with him into chapters such as volcanoes, water, love, forgiveness, etc. It's a very personal story filled with self-deprecation, humor, and awe. A bit heavy on philosophy in some parts and maybe a little light on park descriptions in others, it whets the appetite for further investigation of each park.

Highly recommended for anyone who likes history, travel, nature and personal narratives.
Profile Image for Rob.
440 reviews
May 8, 2020
The author continually strikes out with women and gives few pages to the parks themselves. The parks will always love you back, Conor. You owed them more with this book.
Profile Image for Kristy.
1,534 reviews10 followers
December 27, 2021
I knew I would like this going into it. I didn't know it would end up being one of very favorite books I've read this year.
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I took my time wandering through this trip through National Parks, learning so much about each one. I have many trips tentatively planned in my head. First, I need to visit Zion and Canyonlands to finish The Mighty 5.
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"Moses didn't go to a building in the middle of a city when he wanted to talk to God, he went to the top of a mountain."
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"I don't know what, if anything, comes after this life. But I can tell you this: if there is a heaven, I bet it looks a lot like Yosemite."
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"Parks are the homes we've taken off the market. Despite their often painful origin stories, our national parks have become our collective sanctuaries, places that welcome us back through their gates with open arms no matter how long we've been away."
Profile Image for Jacque Dalton.
192 reviews10 followers
December 4, 2023
I loved this book! :) it’s the perfect way to highlight some of the most underrated nationals parks (& the main stream ones) but in a personal way. Conor Knighton is a cutie so I hope he finds his person if he hasn’t already. 🫶🏼 this was the perfect blend of personal story & educating. I’m itching to go to a national park soon.
Profile Image for Robin.
50 reviews4 followers
June 29, 2020
If you are picking up this book for inspiration to seek out our National Parks or want to learn more...this is not the book for you. Why would the author tells us about his time spent on Tinder scrolling left and right? How does that fit in with a National Park book? So much was painful to get through. It was a strange blend of a few interesting park facts, mixed in with Tinder and boring details that added nothing. Well I can say this, I was inspired to write my own damn National Park book.
Profile Image for Bronson.
239 reviews8 followers
June 7, 2020
This book was a pleasant and happy surprise. It was given to me as a gift and I’d not heard of it or the author before. It happened to coincide with a couple of stormy rainy days that provided hours of uninterrupted reading time and I was happy about that because I had a hard time putting it down.

Conor spends a year visiting all 59 national parks. I love the parks I’ve visited and the outdoors and nature in general so I was intrigued by the premise. There are a few things about the execution of the novel that I really appreciated.
He’s a normal guy, he’s not a scientist, geologist, or biologist. He sees the parks and nature in a normal, relatable way. He doesn’t bog it down with too many statistics or too much history. He gives some, enough to provide context but he points out an interesting thing or two about each place he visits and its so enjoyable to be brought along on his journey.
I love the way he organized the book. Its not alphabetical or in a specific order. He groups 2 or 3 parks into each chapter with a theme that ties them together like “sound” or “trees” or “Light”. I loved that approach.
It’s a personal journey for him, he’s healing from a recent heartbreak and he’s open in his telling about that experience and he works his personal experiences and history into his journey. The book feels personal and light and fun and happy. It’s a very solid 5 star book for me, it’s one I’d recommend without reservation. If you’re interested into a video preview of his journey, take a look at this YouTube clip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S62yI.... Some of his experiences were shared on CBS Sunday Morning where he works.
Profile Image for Stephanie Froebel.
379 reviews28 followers
March 8, 2021
This book is really a 3.5/5, but the 5-star scale reduces ambiguity sometimes to a fault.

Anyways, Leave Only Footprints is a wonderful memoir-based book touching on one man's journey through every national park in a year. Not only does Knighton cover his own personal experience, he also writes the stories of each place he visits, giving them in a roundabout way, their touch at memoir, (I guess since a tree cannot easily do that... well I mean they are the paper so in a way— nevermind that) adding in a rather delightful comedic effect and personability. Where I thought this book lacked, was the memoir-ness. Truthfully, the flaws I found were all based on personal preference (except for the two typos I found), but I cannot help but wish there were more introspection or personal reflection. Don't get me wrong, I loved reading about the history behind national parks, but I couldn't help but feel a little distanced from the author and the scenery (for the lack of vivid descriptions of the imagery) and quite possibly, too much land to cover for a single book. I mean, approximately 62 national parks are a lot of unique and diverse land that could fill multiple books each. I guess to tackle that maybe more pictures would be nice or even pictures that connected with the story, adding to the narrative, rather than quoting parts of the narrative would've been nice. At times I found the history of the parks boring, and just wanted to hear the narrator's experience and relationship to the land, but I think Knighton was right in including the parks' histories. In particular, I appreciated his dedication to the strive in the park system and other groups to increase the visitor diversity in the parks to better reflect the diversity of America. After all, these public lands belong to every citizen and their tax dollars, not just one racial population.

So overall, I would say this was a good read. It wasn't perfect or my favorite, but I am not overtly opposed to some of the good work Knighton put to paper. I just wish this genre was more populous: one single bookcase at Barnes and Noble does NOT contain my literary desires!
Profile Image for BookstagramETC.
1,002 reviews
Want to read
September 1, 2023
From MMD Best Books of Summer - one of Will's picks. Audio available immediately on Libby! Read by the author.

The link below is a five minute news segment on raising sled dogs at Denali National Park. I dare you to watch it without smiling!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTsJd...

I got to it via this book recommendation blurb:
After weathering a broken engagement, CBS Sunday Morning correspondent Conor Knighton decided to spend the year visiting every single National Park. Read his account and then watch the On the Trail news segments that followed.

I might get his book: Leave Only Footprints: My Acadia-to-Zion Journey Through Every National Park, but in the meantime the 20 or so short segments that he filmed in various National Parks make for fun watching. (Link to the full list here.)

This is from about 6-7 years ago so you may have watched this at the time!
Profile Image for Nancy Motto.
313 reviews30 followers
October 9, 2022
I read Leave only Footprints by Conor Knighton for my next Book Group's discussion. It has been on my TBR list for ages and maybe I would have gotten to it on my own eventually, but then again, maybe not. If not I would have missed out on a delightful book. The author, Conor Knighton decided to take a year to travel to different national parks across the country and Leave only Footprints is his account of that year. It's not only chock full of interesting facts but also gentle humor and philosophical musings that really make you think about subjects like God, beauty, the environment, the different people who settled on the land we now know as national parks, sometimes thousands of years ago as well as the people in present day who have dedicated their lives to helping to preserve the parks for future generations.
Profile Image for Britney.
6 reviews3 followers
May 2, 2024
I really enjoyed this book. As a National Park lover, I connected with the author's desire to be in nature and to visit all of the parks. Following this journey, I learned a lot about places that I have visited and others that I have on my bucket list. I feel more connected to some of the parks, and appreciated the author's treatment of topics that matter to me personally related to the parks (e.g. diversity, preservation for future generations, accessibility, sound, etc.). While clearly written by a professional journalist (the chapers read like a well-crafted news story which isn't my favorite style), I can see myself enjoying this book again and again, and refering to it in the future. For that reason, it's hard for me to consider awarding anything other than 5 stars for this great contribution to nature literature and memoir.
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