![]() ![]() “I have not tired of the wilderness rather I enjoy its beauty and the vagrant life I lead, more keenly all the time.” Everett Ruess was a content hermit of sorts. There isn’t anything new to add to the story of Everett Ruess, his wanderings, or his disappearance.ĭoug Fabrizio had that same notion when Roberts’ was a guest on KUER’s RadioWest, and he found out there was a WHOLE lot more to the story, including many, many pages of as-of-yet unpublished journal entries and writings by Ruess himself.ĥ. Jon Krakauer re-discovered, more currently, the mystery of Everett Ruess while researching his book, Into the Wild.Īctually, it was David Roberts, author of Finding Everett Ruess, who told Jon Krakauer, his friend and climbing buddy, about the number of similarities between Ruess and the subject of Krakauer’s bestselling Into the Wild, Chris McCandless. The correct pronunciation is the two syllable. ![]() ![]() Subsequent, and accurate, DNA tests showed the remains did not belong to Ruess. His remains were found in 2009 on Comb Ridge, near the town of Bluff, Utah. ![]()
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