![]() ![]() And Solnit’s own memoirs of wandering on foot across the hills of California and England and down the busy streets of Europe’s great capitals-and, in a particularly inspired turn, along the Las Vegas Strip-offer inspiration and succor to anyone who rails against the soulless supremacy of automobiles in the modern age. Walking, she observes, is good for us humans, and not only for the exercise it affords it also “allows us to be in our bodies and in the world without being made busy by them.” Her portraits of famous walkers of city streets and rural byways alike-Henry Thoreau, John Muir, Aristotle, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Charles Baudelaire among them-suggest that the best thinking is indeed done, as Saint Jerome observed, by walking around the author’s remarks on the history of pilgrimage show the importance of peregrination in contemplative spiritual traditions. ![]() “Moving with ease from discussions of early hominid skeletal structure to the place of wandering on foot in the development of the Romantic poetic sensibility, Solnit embraces nature and culture alike in this vigorous look at all things peripatetic. She’s one of our favourite intellectuals and oddballs: ![]() The Kirkus brilliantly summarises what makes Solnit such a capacious writer. ![]()
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