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Hardcover Solitude: Seeking Wisdom in Extremes: A Year Alone in the Patagonia Wilderness Book

ISBN: 1577316320

ISBN13: 9781577316329

Solitude: Seeking Wisdom in Extremes: A Year Alone in the Patagonia Wilderness

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Years after losing his lower right leg in a motorcycle crash, Robert Kull traveled to a remote island in Patagonia's coastal wilderness with equipment and supplies to live alone for a year. He sought... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A 'must' for any new age collection

Solitude: Seeking Wisdom in Extremes comes from an author who traveled to a remote island in the Patagonia wilderness with enough supplies to live alone for a year. His diary of his year alone chronicles both physical and mental challenges and makes for a powerful account in Solitude: Seeking Wisdom in Extremes: a 'must' for any new age collection.

Touching

For some reason it seems that many of the previous reviewers of this book went into it thinking it was going to be the feel good story of the year. They chide the author for being selfish, cruel, insensitive...shame on you Bob Kull for being human and being willing to tell us about it. Please continue to seek.

truly moving

I just heard Bob Kull do a reading from his book. If the rest of it is as moving as the poems and excerpts he read, this work and the journey it's based on is truly remarkable. This was not some peaceful soul-searching journey he took but a year of terror, defiance, utter beauty, and transcendance. I can't wait to read the entire book after what I heard tonight.

So You Think Your Spirit Is Calling You to Go Off Into the Woods? Well, Read This Book First

One of our most enduring American dreams is to find solitude in nature. Perhaps to find our own Walden Pond, like Henry David Thoreau. Perhaps to head down a river like Mark Twain's characters. Perhaps to trek to the Arctic like characters in Jack London's tales. This autumn, I started reading this graceful yet haunting memoir by Bob Kull, a rugged scholar of many talents. I was hooked. I kept picking it up and reading 50 pages. Putting it down. Then it always drew me back. Perhaps my restless reading of his book is a salute to Bob's own restless spirit. Bob has been a logger, a truck driver, a fire fighter, a travel guide and a professor. Years ago, he lost a portion of one leg in a motorcycle accident -- but that didn't slow him down much. In 2001, in the great tradition of Thoreau and so many other Americans, Bob set off into the wilderness. Rather than a convenient local pond, however, Bob set off alone into one of the remotest and most unforgiving regions of the world: the wilderness at the extreme southern tip of Chile. I like the tone of this book. There are echoes of Jack London here. Echoes of Thoreau. This is not a sentimental memoir by any means. Think of Jack London's "To Build a Fire," the story of a man simply trying to walk through the extremes of Arctic cold. (2008 is the centennial of London's final and most famous version of that classic tale.) Bob Kull is at his best when he's writing about the edgy anxiety and very specific daily struggles of trying to survive in extreme solitude. Very few of us will ever travel to the tip of Chile, let alone try to camp out there alone for a year. But what Bob really is writing about is a spiritual challenge as close as our own heartbeat. All of us feel isolated, sometimes. All of us feel drawn toward solitude. And yet, like Thoreau who finally left Walden because "I had several more lives to live," Bob is also pushing us in the other direction. He's inviting us into his solitude, partly to push us back toward community. Once home again, Bob writes at the end of his book, "I still struggle with feelings of isolation. In those times, a wall seems to separate me from others; a wall that begins to dissolve when I lean into it and treat myself and those around me with compassion." In that way, this is a more sophisticated spiritual memoir than books like "Into the Wild," by Jon Krakauer. I hope that Bob Kull attracts as big an audience as Krakauer's best seller. There's a lot to learn from this epic tale.

Ask yourself just one question: "Could I do what he did?" Then read this book . . .

"Solitude" is a truly inspiring story, a real-life account of a man who spent a year in complete solitude on a remote wilderness island in South America. His initial aim was to "find spiritual enlightenment" and to come back with answers he could share with others through books, lectures, and film. His book is a series of captivating journal entries, mixed with contemplative interludes, about his day to day struggles dealing with the often intense and wild weather, finding food, building shelter, his complicated relation with his only companion, a cat, and coming to terms with his inner demons -- without any of the usual social "crutches" available to distract him. Although he doesn't make a big deal of it, he achieved all of this with one leg! As soon as I got into the rhythm of his story, I did not want to leave it. I put everything else on hold, so as not to break the spell of reliving the tornado of pain, grief, peace, joy, and insight that flows from the pages of this gripping, evocative, and inspiring book. His writing is captivating because it is so honest, so authentic, so real, so human. Rarely, if ever, have I read such raw honesty. It takes real courage to express -- and even to read -- the full play of light and shadow in the human soul. He went into solitude for a year, to an isolated island off southern Chile, in search of answers (or The Answer). He was intent on finding a way to spiritual enlightenment, to discover deep insights that he could take back to the world, answers he could share that would make the business of living life a little easier for others. But this is not what happened. He did not find The Answer, except to realize over and over and over again that there are no answers. However, this is no "empty message" -- we learn, instead, that the emptiness of "no-answer" is the fullest answer of all. The integrity and spirit that shine from his writing will inform and inspire the rest of us who aim for spiritual enlightenment in the comfort of our homes, surrounded by friends and family. You don't have to abandon everything, pack up supplies, and head out into the wilds to discover the heights and the depths of the human spirit. Dr. Kull has done that for us. And he has returned to tell us that enlightenment is not an achievable end-state; rather, it is an ongoing process of opening to and accepting whatever shows up-inside and outside. Most of all, when you read "Solitude" you will realize, as Bob Kull has, that experiencing the richness of "ordinary" life is the most extraordinary achievement of all. Like the bestselling book and Oscar-nominated movie "Into the Wild," Bob Kull's story brings us face to face with a "search for wisdom in extremes." The main difference, though, is that Kull lived to tell the tale. And we should be grateful for that. If you want to know what it truly means to be human, I encourage you to read this remarkable book.
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