Writing Snowbound was, in many ways, a second hike for Riley Riffel, demanding the same patience, discipline, and vulnerability that the Pacific Crest Trail once did. Translating months of solitude, fear, and beauty into words meant revisiting moments that had shaped him in the snowiest year the PCT had ever seen. Each page became a new kind of ascent, steep, uncertain, and deeply personal.
When Riley began writing, he didn’t intend to create a book. He wanted to remember the way the Sierra shimmered under frozen sunlight, the laughter of hikers sharing freeze-dried meals, the weight of exhaustion that somehow felt like freedom. But as the memories unfolded, they formed a story that wasn’t just about survival. It was about transformation.
He wrote the way he hiked, one step at a time. Some days the words came easily, like downhill stretches after a long climb. Other days, they resisted, buried beneath doubt or distraction. But much like the trail, persistence revealed meaning. The story grew into something larger than miles or maps; it reflected what it means to endure, grieve, and hope.
Riley found that writing demanded the same honesty the trail had taught him. There was no room for performance or perfection, only truth. The process became an act of grounding, a way to carry the lessons of the PCT into the stillness of daily life.
In sharing “Snowbound”, Riley hoped to give readers a window into the wilderness and a mirror into themselves. Beyond the snowfields and summits, the book speaks to anyone who’s ever been lost and found, in their own journey.