Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home

Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home

by Heather Anderson

Pacific
Amazon:★★★★★4.6(1,442)
Goodreads:★★★★4.02(5,825)
FREE$19.95
Share:

Added on January 14, 2026

Description

"Beautiful and deftly written and intimate and searing in its honesty, Anish’s is a quest to conquer the trail and her own inner darkness." -- Foreword Reviews"Filled with ruminative self-reflection, soaring natural descriptions and delightful accounts of the gracious, life-sustaining 'trail magic' of hiking culture, Thirst is a testament to human endurance, inspiring to hikers and non-hikers alike." -- Shelf Awareness"A refreshingly candid account of how an average person can harness a steadfast determination to achieve the spectacular." ― OutsideNamed "50 Best Hiking Books of all Time" by BACKPACKER MAGAZINEBy age twenty-five, Heather Anderson had hiked the Appalachian, Pacific Crest, and Continental Divide Trails--a combined distance of nearly eight thousand miles with a vertical gain of more than one million feet. Then, feeling it was time to settle down, Heather retired from long-distance hiking, married, and started a career. But her urge for wilderness was too strong, and she realized that nothing could replace the comfort she found while hiking. Her marriage crumbled. She quit her job. And she walked back into the mountains.In Thirst: 2600 Miles to Home, Heather, whose trail name is "Anish," explores her motivations in returning to the trail--and to her record-setting success on the PCT when she hiked 40-plus miles a day, often walking late into the night by glow of a headlamp, and facing down rattlesnakes, mountain lions, bears, raging rivers, snow, and lightning. She shares her joy in leaving behind a mundane life, and amid the rigors of the trail--the pain, fear, loneliness, and dangers--she discovers the greater rewards of both community and self-fulfillment. She learns that setting records is merely a catalyst, teaching her how to live a life of courage, confidence, and purpose.

Reader Reviews

Marla

The title 'Thirst' is appropriate because I found myself scoffing at the risks she was taking with her water throughout the whole book. She often doesn't carry enough water for her speed & distance, or she is so rushed for time that she doesn't properly purify her water towards the end of the hike. She also mentions how before she even begins her FKT attempt, she has anemia and was ill. She doesn't eat enough calories and other hikers were even mentioning 'Is that all you're eating?' when she st

★★★★Michelle Morrell

I read this straight through in about three hours on a Saturday morning, and in doing so I felt maybe I understood the author's staggering determination to do something amazing, break the fastest time ever to walk the Pacific Crest Trail. Okay, no, I'm kidding, lying in bed with my heated blanket and cup of coffee I have no idea what she went through to push her body and mind to perform this feat, beyond what she was able to put on paper. But I do know my heart is in the woods and I need to do a

★★★★★Martha☀

Exhilarating! In 2013, Anish set the fastest known time (FKT) for backpacking the Pacific Crest Trail, alone and self-supported, in a record time of 60 days 17 hours 12 minutes. This young woman was faster than any other man or woman on this 2650 mile (4265 km) long trail.Imagine having the single mindedness to pursue a seemingly impossible goal for two solid months without any break. It is unfathomable. But she did it with the simple mantra of 'take another step'. There are very few rainbows an