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Riverman: An American Odyssey
By (Author) Ben McGrath
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
13th October 2023
27th April 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Rivers and lakes
Canoeing and kayaking
797.122092
Paperback
272
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 17mm
210g
Brilliant, clear, and humane Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love
Miraculous and hopeful Emma Straub, author of All Adults Here
Quietly profound belongs on the shelf next to Jon Krakauers Into the Wild New York Times
Riverman: An American Odyssey uncovers the story of an extraordinary man and his puzzling disappearance, and paints a picture of the singular spirit of Americas riverbank towns.
The peace of mind I found, largely alone, on that white-water mecca convinced me that life was capable of exquisite pleasure and undefined meaning deep in the face of failure. The experience itself is the reward. Dick Conant
On his forty-third birthday, Dick Conant, a golden boy who never quite grew up as those around him expected, stepped into a homemade boat to embark on a journey despite a gathering snowstorm. Among his possessions was a Gideon Bible and biographies of Einstein and Bismark. It was the beginning of an all-consuming odyssey by an unconventional man into the watery arteries of America, a journey to the unreported margins of society. He was to spend the next twenty years canoeing thousands of miles of rivers and their innumerable smaller tributaries, from one end of the country to the other. I can, and I will! he said. And then, in 2014, he disappeared.
Not long before Conants upturned canoe was found in a brackish North Carolina bay, Ben McGrath met Conant by chance as he paddled down the Hudson, headed for Florida. McGrath set out to find the people whose lives, like his own, had been touched by their encounter with the great river wanderer. Along the way he meets eccentrics and neer-do-wells drawn straight from the pages of Mark Twain, a vast network of friends and acquaintances who would forever remember this brilliant and charming man even after a single meeting.
Riverman is the story of a restless soul who was as troubled as he was charismatic, a contemporary folk hero who slips the moorings of ordinary civilised life to tap into what Thoreau called a yearning toward all wildness. It is also a riveting portrait of an America we rarely see: a nation of unconventional characters, small river towns, and long forgotten waterways.
This is a beautifully told and near-mythical tale of one mans quest to find peace through communion with nature, and through perpetual motion. My heart was deeply stirred by Riverman, and by Ben McGraths brilliant, clear, and humane storytelling. This one will stay with me for a long time Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love
Riverman is as miraculous and hopeful as its protagonist, the Zelig of Americas waterways, Dick Conant. Its a great book for people like me, who read Into the Wild but have shed our self-destructive wanderlust and settled into middle age. This book will make you want to buy a canoe and spend less time on Instagram Emma Straub, bestselling author of All Adults Here
McGraths reconstruction of Dick Conants tangled career and yearning soul is so meticulous, so obsessive, that Conant comes to life on the page as vividly as any character in American literature. Conant wanted his story told. Here it is, in all its pathos and sheer unlikeliness. You will never see rivers and the towns on their banks the same way after reading Riverman. Ditto, I predict, for expansive, raggedy strangers William Finnegan, bestselling author of Pulitzer Prize winner Barbarian Days
This quietly profound book belongs on the shelf next to Jon Krakauers Into the Wild New York Times
Superb McGrath captures his subject with warmth and humour Wall Street Journal
Captivating A paean to eccentricity and endurance and a study of a life that changed the chroniclers own perceptions A memorable and intoxicating exploration of what we make of those who reinvent themselves Kirkus, starred review
In the vein of classics by Twain and Thoreau, and, more recently, Cheryl Strayed's Wild (160k TCM), Jon Krakauer's Into The Wild (167k TCM) and Stranger in the Woods by Michael Finkel (5k TCM), Riverman aims to be a classic tale of Americans confronting nature. The book is based on an article Ben wrote for the New Yorker, which received wide critical acclaim.