We’ve highlighted some of the best in bold below:
- Five – Five reworked classics
- Freedom of the Hills – Not his classic climbing text, this is his personal climbing autobiography (warning: pretty much unreadable handwriting until p 60 of the PDF – so scroll way down to where the typewritten version begins)
- Fighting Forewords – A collection of the previously published forewords he wrote for many books, some of his most eloquent writing in defense of the wilderness
- Asleep Not in the Deep – A Kerouac-style reflection on sleep and dreams
- The Decline and Fall of Backpacking – A satirical attempt to reverse his published writings’ effect of sending thousands of newbies into the wild
- Gods, Devils, and Wilderness Pedestrians – A mix of autobiographical stories of his time as a University student and his climbing adventures, with a dash of theology
- Summary of the Mt. Hornblower Hearings – Fictional description of hearings with thinly-disguised parallels to conservation battles
- How We Saved Mother Milk – Fictional story of selling advertising for the “Mistville Star-Tribune”
- The Making of a Mountain Bum – Autobiographical story of how the Mannings made it
- Mt. Everest & Me – Another hiking and climbing autobiography
- In the Long Run – Fictional or factual climbing stories
- On the Trail of the Milky Way – A journal of hiking and climbing experiences
- Mister Pippa Passes – Harvey walks the shore of Puget Sound from Tacoma to Seattle (similar to his book Walking the Beach to Bellingham)
- Terror, Love, Adventure, Prayer – A moving meditation on four sets of his life’s experiences, including the Red Scare
- The World of Work, 1931-1971 – Harvey’s career
- This Petty Place – How Harvey saved This Issaquah Alps
- Unk is Coming Back – Fiction in Beat Generation style