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103 Works 986 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Johnny Molloy is the author of more than seventy books covering the Southeast and beyond, including Paddling Georgia, Paddling Tennessee, Best Easy Day Hikes: Charleston, South Carolina, and Coastal Trails of the Carolinas, as well as Outward Bound Canoeing Handbook. Visit the author at show more johnnymolloy.com. show less

Series

Works by Johnny Molloy

60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Nashville (2002) 43 copies, 2 reviews
Long Trails of the Southeast (2002) — Author — 15 copies
Backpacking Florida (2023) 2 copies
Hiking set 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Molloy, Johnny, 1961-
Molloy, John Timothy
Birthdate
1961
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
Rating: 5 Stars

This book is amazing! I'm so glad I bought this book! This book is very informative from trail maps, directions to the hiking spot, descriptions of the hiking location, history and what to expect while hiking there. My family and I love hiking so this book was well worth the money spent. It lists all the hiking trails within a 30-40 mile radius of where we live. With this book we have uncovered hiking trails that we didn't even know were so close to us.

A must have for North GA show more hikers! show less
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It was interesting learning history about Florida and also to experience the author's travels via canoe and then kayak through Florida rivers and ocean.
Extremely detailed and covered many of the most beautiful hikes in the area. Well work buying and using to explore the area!
Molloy, Johnny. 60 Hikes within 60 Miles, Nashville: Including Clarksville, Columbia, Gallatin, and Murfreesboro. 2nd ed. Birmingham: Menasha Ridge Press, 2007. ISBN 13: 978-0-89732-607-0, ISBN 10: 0-89732-607-5.

There is obviously a numbers game going on among books on hiking in Tennessee: 40 Hikes in Tennessee’s South Cumberland, by Russ Manning (3rd edition, 2000); 50 Hikes in the Tennessee Mountains, by Doris Gove, 2001); and the first edition of 60 Hikes within 60 Miles: Nashville show more (2002). Do I hear 70? How about 62, the number of trails covered in Hiking Tennessee, by Kelley Roark (1996)? (A second edition of this guide is in the works, due out in 2009.) But the grandfather of them all is Hiking Tennessee Trails, by Evan Means and updated by Bob Brown (5th edition, 1999), which dates back to 1979; it includes 125 trails from the mountains to the Mississippi and is the sine qua non among Tennessee trail books.

Johnny Molloy, a Tennessee native, is a busy man, having written twenty-nine books on hiking, camping, paddling, and other outdoor adventures, mostly in the Southeast—as can be appreciated at his own website http://www.johnnymolloy.com/. Thus this second edition of 60 Hikes within 60 Miles: Nashville follows the model of other 60 Hikes in other Southeastern states consisting of (1) hiking recommendations by length and setting, (2) an introduction to the book and to hiking itself, (3) sixty entries on sixty hikes, (4) appendices bearing very little information, and (5) an index. Each entry includes (1) key at-a-glance information on each trail (length, configuration, difficulty, etc.), (2) in-brief description followed by a fuller description of the trail in question, (3) directions to get there, (4) GPS trailhead coordinates, (5) a map of the trail, and (6) nearby/related activities—all of this laid out in very legible black-and-white maps and photos. Of the 60 trails, 16 are in the immediate Nashville area, 13 west of Nashville, 9 to the southwest, 11 to the southeast, and 11 to the east—a nice balance for anyone living or visiting in the general area.

The only competitor in terms of geographical coverage is Robert Brandt’s excellent Middle Tennessee on Foot: Hikes in the Wood & Walks on Country Roads (1998). Of the 60 trails featured in Molloy, only 24 appear in Brandt, but the latter’s book includes 17 sites that extend beyond Molloy’s 60-mile limit from Nashville. Also, Brandt’s attention to historical detail and setting gives a richness to his book that will not be easily superceded, even if Molloy is more up to date. I also prefer Brandt’s arrangement by park or area rather than by name of trail; generic names such as Highland Trail, Lakeside Trail, Pinnacle Trail, Perimeter Trail, and Connector Trail have no meaning when listed by themselves.

The fact that Molloy’s guide is limited to hiking trails within sixty miles of Nashville does not mean that it will not be useful in libraries elsewhere in the state and beyond. Nashville has become a major tourist site and many of those tourists come to enjoy the natural beauty of this area as well as its music and other attractions. Recommended for all libraries in the state.

Reviewed by Edwin S. Gleaves
State Librarian & Archivist (Ret.)
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Statistics

Works
103
Members
986
Popularity
#26,110
Rating
3.9
Reviews
9
ISBNs
275
Favorited
1

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