meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Mountain & Prairie with Ed Roberson

Our 10 Favorite Adventure Books, with Mark Kenyon

Mountain & Prairie with Ed Roberson

Mountain & Prairie Media

Places & Travel, Personal Journals, Society & Culture

4.9 • 1.1K Ratings

🗓️ 5 March 2026

⏱️ 97 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Mark Kenyon is no stranger to Mountain & Prairie listeners—he's the author of "That Wild Country," host of the Wired to Hunt podcast, and the newly minted Director of Conservation at MeatEater. He's also one of the most voracious readers I know.

Every few years, Mark and I record a special episode where we discuss our top 10 favorite books in a particular category. The first one was our top 10 conservation books, then we explored our top 10 books about the American West—you can find links to both of those episodes in the show notes.

For this episode, we decided to discuss our top 10 adventure books—a category that both Mark and I love and have spent decades reading. We each brought five books that have stayed with us. Some are classics. Some are newer. Some are brutal. Some are unexpectedly funny. All of them reveal something about the human drive to embrace discomfort and move toward the unknown rather than away from it.

Yes, Mark and I love reading adventure books for entertainment and enjoyment, but we also both try to extract lessons from these wild stories that can be applied to our own lives. Whether we're thinking about family, assessing risk, leadership, attitude, or simply not taking ourselves too seriously, there are important lessons to be learned from even the most outlandish adventures. So this conversation goes much deeper than a simple "Read this book because it's good"—we discuss how these books have shaped us and how they continue to influence our thinking.

And if you like book recommendations, be sure to sign up for my bimonthly book recommendations email. For more than ten years, I've been sending one email every other month featuring books I recently read and highly recommend. The topics and genres are all over the place—and can admittedly be a little weird—but people seem to enjoy them, so I keep sending them. I just published my recommendations for January and February 2026, so you can find a link in the show notes and sign up if you're interested.

Thanks so much for listening!

---

---

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS:

Mountain & Prairie is listener-supported via Patreon, and brought to you with support from the Central Grasslands Roadmap, The Nature Conservancy in Colorado, North Bridger Bison, and the Old Salt Co-op for their generous sponsorship.

---

TOPICS DISCUSSED:

  • 0:00 - Introducing Mark Kenyon and highlighting North Bridger Bison
  • 6:05 - Mark's new role at MeatEater
  • 13:03 - Mark's next book timeline
  • 18:28 - A new MeatEater podcast
  • 21:43 - Getting into the books, starting with a Doug Peacock classic
  • 28:17 - The first TR book Ed ever read
  • 35:30 - The layers of Teddy Roosevelt
  • 37:59 - Mark's next pick, a more recent option
  • 42:21 - Ed's up, with a cliche?
  • 47:55 - Bonus rec from Mark
  • 50:33 - American Buffalo
  • 1:03:03 - Navigating risk outdoors
  • 1:07:48 - Pivoting to lighter adventure books
  • 1:12:53 - An adventure book by a woman
  • 1:17:57 - Mark's last choice and a caribou conversation
  • 1:26:35 - And Ed's last choice, connecting with mountaineering 
  • 1:34:45 - Wrapping up

---

ABOUT MOUNTAIN & PRAIRIE:

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

That's the interesting thing of adventure books is that they can do a couple things for you.

0:05.0

They can help you scratch the itch if you want to do these things but don't have the time or the resources or are able to be in a family situation at that moment where you can go do it.

0:15.0

They can also maybe show you you don't want to do some of these things.

0:19.0

They can help you get a sense of whether

0:21.0

or not this is right for you. They can help you learn about how to actually tackle these kinds of

0:26.5

things, how to engage with a wild landscape or an adventure like this in a certain way. Whether you

0:32.3

want to go do one of these things or not, or whether you're unsure of that this is right for you

0:36.6

or not, these adventure books can take you that this is right for you or not, these

0:37.7

adventure books can take you to these places.

0:39.5

They can transform your experience in the moment and far into the future.

0:44.0

And that's the power of them.

0:45.5

That's why I just can't stop eating this stuff up.

0:50.0

This is the Mountain and Prairie podcast.

0:52.4

I'm Ed Robertson.

0:53.7

My guest today is Mark Kenyon. Mark is no stranger to Mountain and Prairie podcast. I'm Ed Robertson. I guess today is Mark Kenyon. Mark is no

0:56.7

stranger to Mountain and Prairie listeners. He's the author of That Wild Country, host of the

1:01.7

Wired to Hunt podcast, and the newly minted director of conservation and meat eater. He's also one of the

1:08.0

most voracious readers I know. Every few years, Mark and I record a special episode where we discuss our top 10 favorite

1:14.9

books in a particular category.

1:17.1

The first one was our top 10 conservation books.

1:20.0

Then we explored our top 10 books about the American West.

1:23.6

You can find links to both of those episodes in the show notes.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Mountain & Prairie Media, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Mountain & Prairie Media and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.