
Member Reviews

I loved this book! I like being in the woods, hiking, and camping so that was a plus. Then, as a DIYer, I was even more intrigued!
Patrick is ready to get away from “the daily grind”. He finds a cabin in the Pacific Northwest and buys it. It was in desperate need of renovation. and, with, as he claims, no construction experience, Patrick sets out to renovate the cabin. As any DIYer knows, things do not go as planned. His account of all that can and will go wrong is hilarious!
Cabin is about getting away, improving old friendships and making new ones, learning new things and developing skills, and love for one another and nature. I’m so glad Patrick took us along on this journey!

Cabin was a book with a unique concept. By chronicling the years spent fixing up a tiny uninhabitable cabin into a barely inhabitable cabin, the author explained many, many projects in exhaustive detail. I did enjoy the overall feeling of warmth and comfort that the author and his friends obtained from their frequent visits. I enjoyed the stories of the quirky neighbors and the misadventures that happened often, I would have relished more of that and less of step by step how to instructions. I couldn’t escaped the feeling that this book was being written to bankroll the cabin project rather than to share unique insights and wisdoms.

Sentimental and hilarious. I think anyone looking for a good laugh and adventure story, will enjoy this one.
I would like to thank St. Martin’s Press for providing me with an advance readers copy via access to the galley for free through the NetGalley program.
<b>The Story</b>
Predicaments, challenges, and rewards of off-grid living.
For someone as myself who is quite avid in the outdoors, this felt like an introductory, 101 to life. A bit silly at times, reminding me of the hipster-Antifa types who built gardens in CHAZ/CHOP using cardboard and a sprinkling of soil over top. Second-hand embarrassment for the current state of humanity in how much some people are so disconnected from themselves, to other people, and to nature at this point. But I was cheering for the journey in this book.
Safe wording and difficulty giving into a natural and protective draw, including the inclination to owning a gun, was a last chapter for someone living in a cabin as almost afterthought, which I thought was funny in itself, as “unnecessary” notable to the BB gun, made for twice the laughter.
It was satisfying to follow the “discovery” and the innocent, yet noble willingness to experience the acquisition of skillset and authentic lifestyle of living in the woods, away from the urban luxuries and easy accommodations that not everyone gets to experience in life.
<b>The Writing</b>
I enjoyed how it was written in that it flowed well.
Lots of descriptive detail.
Heavy brand name dropping. Reads like an influencer posting for a sponsorship. Which was rather fun to read through as it captured the societal outlook and contrast between starting from scratch and zero to ultimate convenience and interdependency, separate from the dependency, determination, and sense of accomplishment when you have no one else but yourself.
A book that definitely calls your name to spend more time outside. Savor some hot chocolate and s’mores, cherish the sunrise and sunset, listen to the birds, elk bugling, and the rustling of trees.
I will look forward to reading more from this author.
<a href="https://ericarobbin.com">Blog post</a>

What a great book! I don’t know this author, but I am proud of what he accomplished! There’s nothing like getting out into the woods and listening to nature and smelling a campfire. He bought a falling down cabin and learned to rebuild it by researching and not being afraid to make mistakes. He described it so well I could picture the whole thing in my head. Currently trying to figure out how to talk about 8 of my friends into pitching in to buy a cabin to share…
(As a a side note, after reading the section on the mushroom trip, I will never be tempted to eat mushrooms 😆)
I just really enjoyed this, I hope this cabin brings the same amount of joy to every occupant as it did to the author.
Thanks to Patrick Hutchison, St Martins Press and NetGalley for the book copy.

Brb while I quit my job in the PNW and live in a cabin. I was beyond surprised how funny this book was!! There were moments I genuinely chucked, which is out of the ordinary for me when reading a book. As a lifelong PNW resident, I will definitely be recommending this book to many friends.

I enjoyed this outdoorsy, DIY memoir.
Relatable, down to earth writing made this easy to read and entertaining.

I read through this with more than just a little bit of jealousy, wishing I could be a part of the writer’s friend group, wishing I had my own little ramshackle cabin in the woods.

Thanks to Netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for the ARC of this book.
I enjoyed this fun retelling of a fun, hapless copywriter longing for meaning in life and finding it in the hard work of renovating a decrepit cabin in the woods. While his methodology and efforts occasionally made my engineering brain cringe, the story was lighthearted and full of reflections on what makes places and memories special to us.
The association of place to memories is now thing new, but Patrick Hutchison does a great job of drawing you into what makes the cabin so special to him and his friends. Writing was quite solid, book was enjoyable overall.

I wanted to read this book because I loved Michael Finkel's The Stranger in the Woods and, for some reason, I'm drawn to living-off-the-grid stories. Bored with sitting behind the computer at his current job and seeing all his friends getting married and having babies, Patrick Hutchinson buys a small, run-down cabin in the woods. What follow is his story of renovating the cabin, which has no running water or electricity, making memories with close friends and learning new life skills. There were a few parts of the book that were repetitive and I really would have loved pictures of the cabin, but overall I really enjoyed this book. I would not consider myself outdoorsy and reading this made my want to go camping in the mountains. But maybe not camping at this cabin, or the one Patrick and his friend build from scratch considering he makes it clear he has no formal experience and learned mainly from YouTube videos.
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for this eARC!

I have never laughed out loud so often and so heartily while reading a book. Patrick Hutchison has an unexpected but delightfully comedic way of describing characters and events as mundane as a trip to the hardware store. Sharing the experiences he had with this cabin brought images to mind of my own wishful fantasies of the remote, woodsy setting. It was deeply restorative to hear the ways in which the cabin brought him to discoveries about himself, ideas of community and ideas of work with meaning.

This non-fiction book is the story of how the author bought a dilapidated cabin in the Washington Cascades and, with just about no knowledge of anything, made it habitable. I liked the book ok, it didn't have the charm of House Lessons (one of my favorite books) and the writing was fine, but I lacked a sense of place and a sense of people. I didn't get a real feel for any of his friends or any of the people who also had cabins up Wits End---I was hoping for some interesting characters but these were all basically guys who like to build things. Toward the end Hutchison gets a bit more reflective about the 'meaning' of it all which was interesting but maybe a little too late? I did like the chapter where he took mushrooms and I the mudslide stories were interesting. Three and a half stars rounded down to three.

This book will make even the least outdoorsy person want to drop everything and buy a fixer-upper cabin in the woods.
Let me begin by saying that I am not the target audience for this book. Not even close. I requested this book solely based on the cover and the tagline (and because I love nonfiction). I am not particularly outdoorsy, and I have never done much construction work. I leave all the household fixer-upper projects to my husband. I enjoyed camping and hiking as a teen and young adult, but I haven't done either in over 15 years.
That being said, I loved this book! The writing style was more like reading a long magazine article than a typical nonfiction book. The author, a novice craftsman, purchases a run-down cabin in the Pacific Northwest. As you can imagine, the chaos and stories that ensue are pretty entertaining. I didn't expect how attached I would become to the cabin and to the author's personal story of growth and journey to contentment.
It became so much more than just a cabin in the woods. It became a place to escape the distractions and demands of the modern world—a retreat for friends and family members to use whenever they needed to decompress. If you need a similar feeling, read this book and get wrapped up in the story. You won't be disappointed.
I will mention that I would have enjoyed this book even more as an audiobook.

What a lovely book to read. This story unfolds at an incredible pace that makes for exciting reading. It's a story about finding one's place in this life. It applies to my current dilemma as a newly retired Baby Boomer as it was to Patrick's journey as a newly adulting millennial.
Finding oneself in a mountain cabin completely off the grid gives us all pause to speculate about what could be. The writing is poignant. The story lets us look into Patrick's mind journey without once coming across as preachy or just figuring out a life for everyone. As you enjoy this book—and you will—take the time to reflect on where you are in life. What brings you joy? How can you make your own life ring with joy?
This is not a self-help book. It is entertaining, as you can experience it as a voyeur into Patrick's self-discovery. It is such a lovely place to spend some time discovering how tools can take on a life of their own, how leaks can become metaphors, and how working with what you've got is sometimes better than spending a ton of money.
You've got to read this book if you've got one ounce of DIY. Enjoy!

As someone who has thought of buying an offgrid cabin in the woods, this story really hit home. I also live in the PNW so I can see, hear and smell the location the author is describing in the book. Also made me realize that, along with the romantic ideal of living in the woods, it also is a lot of work.

I admit, I fell hard for the premise of this book. And Patrick Hutchison sounds so much like me at times during this story it made my heart sing, though I have never purchased anything bigger than a car; not knowing what to do after college, working the dead-end job, feeling unfulfilled, and mostly just wanting to go camping. As I got further into this story, though, I found myself distracted, over and over, and finally, I had to start skimming during the final chapters. It irks me to say, but this book had (for lack of a better phrase) overt bro overtones.
There were small details littered throughout that gave me this feeling. The first weekend, a bunch of guys who have no idea what they're doing mess up over and over, but there's beer and they're in the woods, so it's cool. He mentions going through a pile of lighters looking for one with fuel because he couldn't be bothered to throw them away. He didn't want to get advice from even a semiprofessional or return tools that he bought because he thought maybe a man in a big-box hardware store would think less of him. He did not research how to measure before wasting a whole lot of plywood. There are just so many times I can read something about how Hutchison had no idea what he was doing, messed it up big time, and then he repeats over and over how much he loves every single mistake and every single inch. I can understand loving your tiny home in the woods, but to wax poetically about how much incense and wood smoke you can smell in your weekend cabin, to bring up the footprints on the wall at least three times, to describe your futon enough times I wanted to scream every time I read the word, to explain your same weekend routine every time was overkill. It began to drag and I desperately wanted to skip to the end.
It turns out, though, that the end is the real kicker: Hutchison and a close friend decide they want to build cabins or some similar handcrafted large carpentry-related activity, but they don't want to join a construction crew or apprentice. They literally just want to wing it. There's something to be said for wanting to learn on your own, but there's more to be said for at least taking classes on how to use certain tools or learning about building codes from professionals so that you can actually make something that won't kill anyone or have to be torn down. They buy another plot of land nearby and build another cabin that gets sold (did this one count as a house and need to be inspected?!), and eventually Hutchison sells his beloved cabin and leaves a long loving note and more of that damned incense for the new owners.
Let me just add that every "professional" review I read for this was from a man, all of whom used words like "hilarious" and "poignant" and "warm and welcoming", which all make me feel like I missed something.
Look, I've knocked this book enough--it's decent for its genre, the writing isn't terrible, and if you want to ride the wave of back-to-the-land nonfiction with a bro flavor, go for it.
*Thank you to NetGalley, who provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

This was so fun. I was carried away to Witts End myself everything the cabin was visited. Not only was the cabin a place to get away, but a place for memories, learning, and understanding what life really is. This book recounts all the trouble, fun, learning, and friendship anyone could hope for. I truly enjoyed this read.

When I read the description, I was intrigued. Patrick buys a cabin in Index, WA for $7,500 and then he spends time and money in fixing it up. Even though he had no clue about anything, he read a lot of books, watched a lot of YouTube videos, and did a lot of practice messing things up and then fixing them. He did have help in friends and everybody enjoyed spending time at the cabin as there was no electricity, water, or internet. It was a place to get away from the world, and he enjoyed that aspect.
Overall, I enjoyed the book and reading about his adventures.

Reading “Cabin” is intensely atmospheric and transportive. The story follows the author’s trials and triumphs renovating a rundown mountain cabin. Along the way, he learns carpentry, roofing, plumbing, and more, but more importantly, he learns about himself and what really matters. This book made me want to buy some tools of my own and start tinkering. I loved the vivid descriptions, the tangents about hands-on learning, and the laugh-out-loud honesty in every sentence. This was an unusual but highly entertaining read!

This was quite an interesting book about a time in the author’s life when he decided to buy a cabin in the woods. Finding that he bought something less than perfect, he recounts his adventures while slowly making the cabin his home.
I found myself laughing out loud several times in this book. The crazy situations he found himself in with the cabin were hilarious at times. Hutchison is a talented writer who was able to paint a picture of the cabin, the surrounding landscape, and the friends he met along the way, with such clarity, I felt like I was actually there.
It would have been great to have a section within the book of photographs. I would really have liked to see the neighborhood where the cabin was located. Also, the book was longer than it needed to be. Probably by 50 to 100 pages. Hutchison started to ramble and get a little repetitive and I found myself getting a little bored during parts of the book in the middle, and skimming some parts toward the end. But overall, this was a very interesting book that I thoroughly enjoyed.
***Thank you NetGalley, Patrick Hutchison, and St. Martin’s Press for this advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.***

Here’s an hilarious, down-home story for anyone who’s ever wanted a cabin, owned a cabin, or gone camping. Close enough. Millennial college grad and copywriter Patrick Hutchison decided that his life needed some direction. With friends getting married, and buying homes, and having babies, he needed a project, an answer to the question, “What have you been up to lately?”
The answer lay in a 10‘ x 12‘ cabin that he bought off of Craigslist for $7,500 from a tugboat captain. It was located in the woods along the rainy, Western side of the Cascade Mountains, about 2 hours away from his Seattle, Washington home. The cabin had no electricity, no plumbing, uneven floors, a leaky roof, patchwork walls, and an air of neglect. Season by season, author Hutchison recounts dozens of funny stories about how he and his incompetent, but well intentioned friends, set about renovating his dream getaway.
The author is not much of a carpenter, but he is an exquisite writer. He brings the reader right into the woods, with the damp earth, the wood smoke, and the colorful, outback neighbors. With few modern conveniences, no Wi-Fi, and no distractions, everyone who was invited there relaxed and enjoyed the camaraderie that comes after sharing a hard day’s work. Readers will find themselves cheering for the author while learning quite a bit about how to replace a roof, or a floor, or an aging outhouse. A very funny, delightful read, and a great escape. Highly recommended!
With thanks to NetGalley, I received an advance review e-copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily. (Publication date: December 4, 2024)