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A Field Guide to Getting Lost
- Narrated by: Rebecca Solnit
- Length: 4 hrs and 51 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Whether she is contemplating the history of walking as a cultural and political experience over the past 200 years (Wanderlust), or using the life of photographer Eadweard Muybridge as a lens to discuss the transformations of space and time in late 19th-century America (River of Shadows), Rebecca Solnit has emerged as an inventive and original writer whose mind is daring in the connections it makes. A Field Guide to Getting Lost draws on emblematic moments and relationships in Solnit's own life to explore issues of wandering, being lost, and the uses of the unknown. The result is a distinctive, stimulating, and poignant voyage of discovery.
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What listeners say about A Field Guide to Getting Lost
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Audy Meadow Davison LMT
- 09-05-16
meditation on the 'other' side of life
So much of American culture is focused on 'doing' on 'success' on 'accomplishment' on 'finding our place', stroking our ego, 'making things happen'. All of which can be exhausting, frustrating, futile or ego deflating as much as it is motivation to make our lives better. This is a very refreshing and often passionate look at the other side. The benefits and pleasures, the meaning and value of letting go, of letting things happen, of wandering off, or getting lost. There are surprises, insights, relief and challenges in those processes also. This book offers us new ways of thinking, feeling and understanding our lives. In all our lives, I presume, there are in mine, times I see as failure, as cop out, as less than I could have, should have been. This perspective gives me a way to reframe some of those experiences for my own benefit, to see their value, to forgive myself, to breathe deeper. Besides that it is very well written and a pleasure to listen to.
11 people found this helpful
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- Natalie
- 03-18-17
Made me sleepy
I love Rebecca Solnit's writing, and I especially love when the audio book is narrated by the author them self. The only critic I have is Solnit's voice is so soft my mind would drift from the story and wander, making me a bit sleepy.
7 people found this helpful
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- Euysung
- 08-18-16
poor narration
I listen to audiobooks as I work, so it's very helpful if the narrator has some energy and inflections in the reading. For this book though, I possibly couldn't understand what the narrator was saying because of her monotonous voice. I couldn't finish the book.
7 people found this helpful
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- Sad
- 05-03-17
Why did they let her read this?
The author's lilting, soft voice took away from her authority. I would find myself daydreaming and at the end, struggled with why she wrote the last chapter. I am returning the audiobook to purchase a hardcopy. Her thoughts are gorgeous and insightful but it is all lost here.
4 people found this helpful
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- Kindle Customer
- 08-31-20
Awful, the author is not fit to narrate audiobooks
The author's voice completely ruined it for me, I couldn't even finish the first chapter. The voice is so slow and sleepy and lacking any emphasis anywhere, that I just couldn't bear it. I was really excited about the book and its topic and I'm sure the print version would be very interesting to read. The audioversion read by the author is horrible.
3 people found this helpful
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- Ami Ami
- 01-03-21
Gen X XY will <3
I saw the TL in SF in the 90s, I saw cliffs of Route 1 at every stage of life, I saw cathedrals in Europe, and graves of my family, and everyone’s ancestors, like dancers at a lifelong festival, wandering gypsies. Free. Thank you Rebecca. You gave me a beautiful retreat and restored parts of my heart with the creativity of your love and Devotion. This book was a gift to my soul.
2 people found this helpful
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- Stephanie Hurt
- 05-03-20
My only complaint, soft spoken reader.
She spoke so softly it was hard to hear clearly what she was saying without turning the volume all the way up.
2 people found this helpful
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- Robert M. Downey
- 10-15-17
Such high hopes, dashed!
I had really high hopes for this book. I thought it was very poetic until I realized it wasn’t good enough to be poetry and lyric, but the prose wasn’t good either. I thought her voice was great until it started to grate on me and then she started fumbling with her own words and then the cuts got sloppier and sloppier. I couldn’t even finish it...
2 people found this helpful
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- ALM
- 12-01-21
Not my style.
I really didn’t prefer this at all. It felt like a stream of consciousness ramblings of a sort of nutty person. There were extremely interesting topics that got brought up, but nothing was a concise thought and the rug gets pulled out from under you as everything is abruptly segued in to something else. So you never really get the feel for a topic before it changes. Something about this made the entire book feel like one giant sentence. I also really didn’t prefer her voice. I do wonder if I would like this book better if I read it myself, but I don’t think it would be that much more enjoyable.
1 person found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 10-30-19
Not a Field Guide to Anything but Rambling
I learned absolutely nothing from this audiobook, sadly. I can't recommend you waste your time reading.
1 person found this helpful
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- Andrew Strangeway
- 11-26-17
Fantastic writer, not a great reader.
I wanted to like this, but found the reading very hard to follow. Solnit often pauses halfway through a sentence at an unnatural point, in a way that makes it a challenge to correctly parse. This is a flaw when each sentence is so heavy with meaning.
I was somewhat heartened to read other reviews, which similarly say the reading is difficult to follow. It’s not just me!
8 people found this helpful
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- Becky Livingston
- 01-03-17
Hard copy preferable
Exceptional content by Rebecca Solnit. I would recommend reading a hard copy over listening to the audiobook as I found her reading voice very repetitive, her tenor rather tragic.
6 people found this helpful
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- Mrs. Francesca Diebschlag
- 04-01-21
One of the greatest books ever written
Solnit's observations of human and non-human life are some of the deepest, truest, most nuanced and broadly informed, that I have ever come across in my 70 years, and her writing is breathtakingly beautiful. This exquisite book is only enhanced by her own reading. After listening to the first hour, I bought a hard copy to put away in a 'time capsule' of treasures I am collecting for my granddaughter for when she is older.
1 person found this helpful
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- Luke T
- 03-23-21
Great content ruined by the narration
Writing and performance are two different skills and it's very evident here. Her cadence and breathy meek voice are off putting. I gave up listening and read the physical version instead, which I would recommend doing, well written and engaging.
1 person found this helpful
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- Nick Rodrigues
- 12-30-20
I prefer to read than to listen to Rebecca
It's one of those tricky and hard to find things: the ability to recognize when you are great at something and not so great at something else. I love Rebecca's writing and have all her books. This book is special for all the insights and reflexive journey it offers, but Rebecca didn't manage to narrate it well. Her voice sounds almost lifeless, and even the punctuation reading is off. I'd stick to the printed version or the e-book.
1 person found this helpful
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- tamara
- 06-13-20
A mapping of the emotional worlds
Listening to this book is like mini meditations, on the histories, natural worlds and the sensations we receive from them. The arousal of geotainment. Highly recommend you treat each chapter as a gift of mindful richness.
1 person found this helpful
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- Noelette
- 02-10-19
Not really my thing
It was OK, not really my kind of thing. Not a fan of the narrator/writers voice , very monotone or some such. I struggled to focus on her voice. And you need to focus. Interesting stories through out, but if your focus slips for a second you're lost. (maybe that's deliberate given the topic of the book)
1 person found this helpful
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- ar
- 03-07-22
Profound, gorgeous book; unfortunate narrator
What a beautiful book that I often gift to others. I was excited to listen to the audio version as well but the narrator’s tone and voice does not do the book any favours. I would love to hear this book read by another person in the future.
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- Pauline O Connell
- 09-17-21
An interesting listen
I loved the narration, dreamlike & airy. The story was beautifully told.
I’m unsure what to think of the story, meandering from piece to piece.
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- Anonymous User
- 04-24-19
beautiful
listening to this audio book has been an incredible journey. I listened to Rebecca Solnits voice on the two hour road trip and in that setting I found my thoughts wandering further than they ever had.
Rebecca's writing style is beautiful and poetic. Her stories leave me lost. And that's one of the best feelings.
10/10
1 person found this helpful
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- Phillipa Freeman
- 10-21-21
Not as good as her other works
I really enjoyed a couple of her other books but the subject matter and the thread tying stories together was just not compelling.
However, Rebecca Solnit’s voice is rich and velvety and lovely to listen to. Highly recommend her other audiobooks (and print too).