Karen Berger (writer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

OccupationAuthor
CitizenshipAmerican
Karen Berger
Born
OccupationAuthor
CitizenshipAmerican
EducationNorthwestern University
GenreTravel, Hiking, Adventure, Music
Notable worksAmerica's Great Hiking Trails, America's National Historic Trails, Great Hiking Trails of the World
Notable awardsLowell Thomas Travel Journalism Awards (gold), National Outdoor Book Award (silver)
Website
www.karenberger.com

Karen Berger (born 1959) is an American writer, long-distance backpacker, and speaker. She is the author of adventure narratives, guidebooks, instructional books, and essays about the U.S. national scenic and historic trails, worldwide trails, and hiking and backpacking skills and techniques.[1]

In 2000, she became the sixth woman to be recognized by the American Long Distance Hikers Association (West) for completing the Triple Crown of Hiking by hiking the Continental Divide Trail (1990), the Appalachian Trail (1994), and the Pacific Crest Trail (1997), a total of nearly 8,000 miles.[2][3] She completed additional treks in the United States, Nepal, Japan, New Zealand, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, England, Scotland, France, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy, Switzerland, and Canada. These experiences, combined with her previous work experience as an editor, led to her career path as a writer specializing in hiking and adventure travel. She lives in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts.

Berger was born in New York, New York. She grew up in New Rochelle, New York, and attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

After graduating in 1980 with a Bachelor of Arts in music, Berger worked as an editor first for the Instrumentalist (a music magazine), and later, for Longman Financial Services Publishing. In between, she took gap years to travel, hike, write freelance articles, and teach in outdoor education programs.[4] In 1987, she became a book acquisitions editor for Island Press, a Washington, D.C. based publisher specializing in environmental books. In 1988, she was married to Daniel R. Smith, a professor of history at Iona College in New Rochelle.

In 1990, Berger left Island Press and Smith took a sabbatical from Iona; the couple hiked the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail from Mexico to Canada.[5] On their return, they co-authored Where the Waters Divide, a book about their journey, which received national attention. Reviews in regional media (San Francisco Chronicle,[6] Flint Journal (Michigan),[7] Rocky Mountain News,[8]) and national media (The Wall Street Journal, [9] E, the Environmental Magazine,[10] Publishers Weekly[11]) discussed how the book combined an adventure narrative with digressions into western American history, western water policy, grazing on public lands, fire suppression policy, and the Endangered Species Act.

With publication of Where the Waters Divide, Berger embarked on her career as an author specializing in hiking and adventure travel.[12] She served as a technical consultant for Trailside, a PBS television show about outdoor adventure, for which she wrote three companion books published by W. W. Norton. She was a contributing editor for Backpacker magazine,[13] where she wrote feature articles and three books published by the Mountaineers Books. Berger became the hiking expert at GORP.com, one of the first outdoor websites on the Internet to combine community forums with activity, skills, and destination content.[14] She commissioned and edited articles, wrote feature stories, answered readers’ questions, and managed discussion groups.[15] She was one of four writers featured in a chapter in the 1997 book edition of Writer's Market about how to be a successful freelancer;[16] her career was also profiled in the American Society of Journalists and Authors publication, ASJA Monthly.[17]

Berger and Smith collaborated on two more books but separated in 2003 and later divorced. Berger moved to the Berkshires of western Massachusetts, where she divided her time between writing and teaching piano.[18] She wrote three books on music for Alpha Books' Complete Idiot's Guide series, as well as more books on hiking and adventure travel. Her articles for print and online periodicals were published in the Saturday Evening Post,[19] NBC News,[20] Outside,[21] and others. From 2000 until 2009, she wrote the instructional “Outdoor Smarts” column for Boy Scouts of America's Scouting magazine.[22] In 2012, she started the travel website, Buckettripper.[23] Starting in 2014, she wrote a series of books for Rizzoli covering the 11 National Scenic Trails, the 19 National Historic Trails, and 38 major global trails. The series received national media coverage from such publications and organizations as USA Today,[24] the Chicago Tribune,[25]Frommer's,[26] Forbes.com,[27]Afar,[28] the American Hiking Society,[29] and the Partnership for the National Trails System,[30] and was featured in best-of lists and in gift-book round-ups[31][32][33] in The New York Times Book Review,[34] in Associated Press-affiliated newspapers around the United States,[35] and in People Magazine.[36]

Media and Speaking

Berger has appeared as a speaker for organizations such as the Continental Divide Trail Alliance (later reorganized as the Continental Divide Trail Coalition), the Appalachian Trail Conservancy,[37] the Pacific Crest Trail Association, and the Smithsonian. In 2018, she added live piano music; her combination lecture-music-slide show was the opening night presentation at the annual meeting of the Appalachian Long Distance Hikers Association.[38] As a result of her books, speaking, articles, and media about her activities, she became a resource for journalists writing about hiking-related subjects in such publications as The New York Times,[39] Sports Illustrated,[40] U.S.A. Today,[41] and the San Francisco Chronicle.[42] She has appeared as a guest on radio shows on NPR,[43][44] the Martha Stewart Radio Network, and the Outside Radio Network, as well as local stations.[45]

Bibliography

Rizzoli Series

America's National Historic Trails

  • Rizzoli, 2020. (ISBN 978-0-847-86885-8)
  • Foreword by Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan, Photographs by Bart Smith

Great Hiking Trails of the World,

America's Great Hiking Trails

Outdoor Guidebooks and Instructional Books

Knots

The Pacific Crest Trail: A Hiker's Companion (with Daniel R. Smith)

Backpacking and Hiking

Be Prepared: Hiking and Backpacking

Hiking the Triple Crown

Backpacker Magazine Series

Hiking Light Handbook

More Everyday Wisdom

Everyday Wisdom

Trailside (PBS TV Show) Companion Books

Scuba Diving

Advanced Backpacking

Hiking and Backpacking

Outdoor Literature

Where the Waters Divide (with Daniel R. Smith)

Along the Pacific Crest Trail (with Daniel R. Smith, Photography by Bart Smith)

Music Books

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Piano Exercises

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Teaching Music on Your Own

The Pocket Idiot's Guide to Piano Chords

Anthology Contributions

Journeys of a Lifetime, National Geographic, 2007. (ISBN 978-1-42620-125-7)

  • "Heli-hiking in British Columbia
  • "Captain Cook's Polynesia
  • "Lewis and Clark"

Appalachian Trail Reader

  • Anthology compiled by David Emblidge
  • Oxford University Press, 1997. (ISBN 978-0-19510-090-7)
  • Contribution: "Trail Days in Damascus"

You Can Do It! The Merit Badge Handbook for Grown Up Girls

  • by Lauren Catuzzi Grandcolas,
  • Chronicle Books, 2005. (ISBN 978-0-81184-635-6)
  • Contribution: “Commune with Nature

Awards

References

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