In this wide-ranging collection of essays Tanis MacDonald walks the reader down many paths, pointing out the sights, exclaiming over birds, sharing stories and asking questions about just who gets to walk freely through our cities, parks and wilderness. Deer move mysteriously through these essays, knowing just when they vanish from sight, as do predators, both human and animal. She walks to begin to understand the place she now calls home in Southern Ontario, catalogues the fauna around her in FaunaWatch and continues walking through illness. From a child spotting a snowy owl on her way to school in Winnipeg, to a young woman watching her own distinctive walk be imitated in an acting class, to a worried daughter helping her mother relearn how to walk after a bad fall on a busy road, MacDonald shares how walking has shaped her life and the lives of many others. Wry, smart, political and lyrical, these essays share the joy of walking as well its danger and uncovers the promise it offers - of healing, of companionship and of understanding.
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Really enjoyed MacDonald's writing, how playful she got with language by turns, while also keeping space for clearly communicating anger and trauma and vulnerability and hope and empowerment. A collection of essays and poetry reflecting on walking as a woman, as a disabled person with degenerative disc disease and chronic pain, as an assault survivor, on walking with with other women, on her mother's walking, on nature encountered while walking. Also includes what I would frame as multimedia elements, non fiction pieces in creative formats.
⚠️references to sexual assault, no recounting of assault, though situations where women felt unsafe are recounted, as well as those encountering public masturbators; ableism; mental health concerns i.e. trauma, panic attacks; discussion of 2020 events: pandemic, Islamophobic murder and residential school grave discoveries; animal death