Sobre este episodio
<p><a href="https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/alex-kotlowitz"><span>Alex Kotlowitz</span></a><span> is known as a chronicler of Chicago, and of lives marred by urban poverty and violence. His books set in the city include “An American Summer,” “There Are No Children Here,” and “Never a City So Real.” Nevertheless, for some 40 years he has returned to a remote stretch of woods, summer after summer. At a young age, he found himself navigating a canoe through a series of lakes, deep in the woods along Minnesota’s border with Canada. This stretch of country is known as the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Larger than Rhode Island, it is a patchwork of more than a thousand lakes, so pristine you can drink directly from the surface. Now in his late sixties, Kotlowitz finds the days of paddling, the leaky tents, the long portages, and the schlepping of food (and alcohol) harder than before, but he will return to the Boundary Waters as long as he can. Last summer, he took a recorder with him on his annual canoe trip, capturing what has kept him coming back year after year. </span></p> <p><i><span>This segment originally aired on August 6, 2022. </span></i></p><br/> <p>Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See <a href="https://pcm.adswizz.com">pcm.adswizz.com</a> for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.</p>
Escucha este episodio en inglés para aprender inglés
Los episodios de podcast son una de las formas más densas de absorber inglés al ritmo nativo. A Trip to the Boundary Waters de The New Yorker Radio Hour te da diálogo natural, habla sin guion y vocabulario que de verdad aparece en conversaciones reales.
En la app Clue, cada palabra de la transcripción es tocable. Toca una palabra desconocida, ve la traducción a tu idioma al instante y sigue escuchando sin romper el ritmo.
Episodios para aprender inglés
- The World Cup, the Knicks, and LeBron James’s Fate: An All-Time Summer in Sports 10 jul 2026
- The Sounds of Summer, with Fred Armisen 7 jul 2026
- Alicia Keys’s New York Musical Goes on National Tour 3 jul 2026
- From The Political Scene: Donald Trump’s Dangerous Politicization of America’s Spy Agencies 30 jun 2026
- America at 250: A View from Britain, with “The Rest Is History” 26 jun 2026
- From Critics at Large: Steve Spielberg's Blockbusters 23 jun 2026
- Hillary Clinton on How Donald Trump Lost the Iran War 18 jun 2026
- The Sports Journalist Pablo Torre Has a Pulitzer, but Still Feels Like the “Turd” in the Pool 16 jun 2026
- Rachel Goldberg-Polin on Losing a Son in Gaza 12 jun 2026
- Seeing the Dark Side of the Moon on NASA’s Artemis II Mission 9 jun 2026
- Jack Schlossberg, the Kennedy Running for Congress in New York 5 jun 2026
- Bonus: David Remnick Takes Calls on the Midterms and the Media 4 jun 2026
- Colson Whitehead on His Harlem Trilogy 2 jun 2026
- Dan Osborn, the Independent Senate Candidate Who Could Tip Nebraska 29 may 2026
- A FEMA Insider Says Morale Has Never Been Lower at the Embattled Agency 26 may 2026
- The U.F.C. President, Dana White, on Donald Trump: “He’s Not a Racist” 22 may 2026
- America at 250: A View from the Streets 19 may 2026
- The History Wars and America at 250, with the Historian Jill Lepore 15 may 2026
- Growing Up with a Mother in Prison 12 may 2026
- Barack Obama in the Trump Era 8 may 2026
- The N.B.A. Legend Steve Kerr 5 may 2026
- How a Trump-Endorsed Republican Could Become California’s Next Governor 1 may 2026
- “Fat Swim” and Literature’s Fatphobia Problem 28 abr 2026
- Why Senator Rand Paul Voted to Limit Donald Trump’s War Powers 24 abr 2026
- Patrick Radden Keefe on “London Falling,” His Book About a Teen-Ager’s Mysterious Life and Death 21 abr 2026
- A Genocide Scholar Asks “What Went Wrong” in Israel 17 abr 2026
- Anna Wintour as Vogue Icon 14 abr 2026
- Sam Altman’s Trust Issues at OpenAI 10 abr 2026
- Pick Three: Spring Sports News 7 abr 2026
- How Donald Trump’s War on Iran Helps Vladimir Putin’s War on Ukraine 3 abr 2026