Rave
Sonja Flancher,
Los Angeles Review of Books
In his sweeping personal account of depression, anxiety, addiction, and childhood trauma, Thompson brings readers on a journey to discover what it means to be not just an ultramarathoner but also a human being.
Pan
Mary Pols,
New York Times Book Review
The Tahoe 200, broken up into increasingly exhausted stages, provides a framework for the narrative of his earlier, traumatized life. It’s a promising approach, but Thompson is coy about the details of what happened to him, interspersed in a nonlinear fashion. Sometimes that’s his only choice, since his memory is imperfect. Other times it feels like a deliberate vagueness, meant to tease us until he gets over the next ridge.
Positive
Kirkus
In this book, the unconscious becomes conscious, the forgotten is recalled, and feelings become thoughts.
Positive
Brenda Barrera,
Booklist
[Thompson] eloquently captures the beauty of communing with nature in details runners will soak up, but the focus of this memoir is about a man who had suffered terribly with depression since childhood, and, in later years, overcame drug and alcohol addiction, but not before attempting suicide.
Positive
Publishers Weekly
Stark.