The Outrun Audiobook By Amy Liptrot cover art

The Outrun

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The Outrun

By: Amy Liptrot
Narrated by: Tracy Wiles
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About this listen

THE SUNDAY TIMES TOP TEN BESTSELLER
WINNER OF THE 2016 WAINWRIGHT PRIZE

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2017 ONDAATJE PRIZE
SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2016 WELLCOME PRIZE

At the age of thirty, Amy Liptrot finds herself washed up back home on Orkney. Standing unstable on the island, she tries to come to terms with the addiction that has swallowed the last decade of her life. As she spends her mornings swimming in the bracingly cold sea, her days tracking Orkney's wildlife, and her nights searching the sky for the Merry Dancers, Amy discovers how the wild can restore life and renew hope.©2016 Amy Liptrot (P)2016 Canongate Books Ltd
Addiction & Recovery Alcoholism Mental Health Nature & Ecology Outdoors & Nature Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Science
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Descriptive Passages • Lyrical Writing • Stellar Narration • Stunning Setting • Humanizing Reflection • Improved Pacing
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Lyrical writing and an in depth description of the flora and fauna of the Orkney Islands.

One woman's personal triumph over alcoholism

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Page turner. Great book about learning to love yourself and focus in on the world around you.

Great listen! Super glimpse into Orkney life

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Pure Gold! I absolutely recommend! Liptrot's writing offers a humanizing reflection on the power of changing our own narratives.

Pure Gold! I absolutely recommend!

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What did you love best about The Outrun?

The narrator's recovery among her native Orkney islands. She made recovery a combo of hard work, being one with nature, and the healing power of the sea

What did you like best about this story?

It didn't grab me from the first - her alcoholism and downward spiral were dull and uninspiring. She told me nothing new. But her return home really picked up the pacing of the book. Counting the birds was terrific.

Which character – as performed by Tracy Wiles – was your favorite?

The narrator of course.

What’s the most interesting tidbit you’ve picked up from this book?

Life on the Orkneys. I may visit.

Slow to Start But Picks Up Brilliantly

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Amy Liptrot’s memoir is a raw honest addition to the recovery story genre. The latter part of the book moves much of the narrative away from recovery and settles in a naturalistic voice. The shift in prose style and narrative felt like the narrator became less confessional and more descriptive of her surroundings rather than her internal voice.

You can’t outrun yourself.

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I need to move to Scotland. it's settled. obviously an island. will need a snorkel

I want to start over at the beginning.

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3.5 stars. A thoughtful memoir recounting the author's alcoholism and journey to sobriety, made even better by a stellar narration.

Much here is not new, though it is rendered in lovely prose. In many ways, addiction stories are similar, with lives spiraling out of control, friendships tested, health endangered, and usually an undercurrent of trying to escape the traumas and disappointments (whether big or small) of life. Then again, each person is individual and the vagaries of life that led them to the substance they come to abuse are different. For Liptrot, she hailed from a family where her father struggled mightily with mental illness and was often at odds with her evangelical mother. Likewise, Liptrot suspected that she might have some of her father's manic and depressive tendencies. For her, her drinking started out in the normal range for her age and social circle but became more intense, less controlled, and eventually wrecked her relationship with a boyfriend, made her job untenable, led to a series of incredibly reckless encounters, and finally forced her to face the fact that she needed to get help.

Where this memoir does stand out from others is that her recovery is played out in the landscape of her childhood - the Orkney Islands off of Scotland. Liptrot describes this windswept and severe setting with great skill, making the cliffs and sea come alive, painting the summer's night-less sky
with magic, and introducing us to the solitude and camaraderie of these lightly populated places (where wildlife often outnumbers people). As she comes to terms with sobriety, she finds herself attempting to accept life without alcohol, working to sever the neurological connections that have been built up over years of drinking. Liptrot obviously struggles to find meaning and purpose for herself, and to really live each day, rather than just trying not to drink. In doing so, she takes long walks and explores her home island and others in the grouping. She takes a job that involves canvassing the island in search of a rare bird, she joins a group that swims in the always frigid seas, she writes and reads and takes time to gain strength and perspective and confidence.

While Liptrot's journey from addiction to sobriety to some measure of contentment is not unique, having it take place in this remote part of the world makes the book well worth the time.

Stunning setting, good memoir

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Oh, the Merry Dancers!
There was a level of honesty reached with the writing of this memoir that must have been difficult to put to paper. That, I admire. Among the brutal honesties are details of living beauties she seeks in place of the drink. What a beautiful journey through the recovery process!

3.5 stars

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Nothing
I am already a non drinker by choice
But loved hearing another version of a person stopping for their reasons

Great story

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Humanity in all its strength and frailties is placed inside the natural world in a setting both wild and predictably cyclical. What an amazing journey and powerful read!

Natural World Exquisitely Described

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