Thirty-Seven Days of Peril / from Scribner's Monthly Vol III Nov. 1871
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About This Book
The narrator recounts becoming separated from an expedition in a dense pine wilderness, losing his horse and supplies, and enduring thirty-seven days of solitary survival. The narrative follows efforts to retrace the party's route, the slow exhaustion of food and fuel, improvised shelter and fire-making, and the constant strain of hunger, cold, and nighttime wildlife. Vivid descriptions of the rugged landscape alternate with pragmatic notes on survival and quiet interior reflection, emphasizing perseverance, the narrowing of hope into resolve, and the physical and psychological costs of isolation in an unforgiving natural environment.
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