cover image So Long as It’s Wild: After My Famous Walk Across America

So Long as It’s Wild: After My Famous Walk Across America

Barbara Jenkins. Dexterity, $27.99 (304p) ISBN 978-1-947297-71-5

A transcontinental trek exposes a couple to gorgeous scenery, menacing criminals, and kindhearted strangers—all while fraying their marriage—in this bittersweet memoir. Jenkins recreates her three-year walk from New Orleans to the Oregon coast with her then-husband Peter in the late 1970s, a trudge that became a public sensation and was immortalized in their joint 1981 bestseller, The Walk West. Here, Jenkins recalls blinding blizzards and broiling heat, trapping alligators in a Louisiana bayou, encountering Colorado bandits who tried to murder her and Peter before being deterred by a passing truck, receiving an escort through the Cascades from a doting preacher, and more. The couple’s worst affliction, though, was each other: they argued constantly and spent a hellish winter snowed in at a cabin in the Colorado Rockies, where Peter bristled at the author’s efforts to edit his prose and called her “a fat ass bitch.” After the trek, the couple enjoyed fame and wealth, and had three children, but their marriage unraveled into a messy divorce and volleying lawsuits in the following decade. The book’s later sections bog down in the rancorous minutiae of marital discord, but Jenkins’s narrative of her epic journey has a cinematic sweep—“[W]hen the sky lit up there was a black funnel in the distance, hanging from thick clouds, spinning like a giant, twisted rope.” It’s an engrossing reminiscence. (Sept.)