Published 01/01/2001 | Paperback / softback,
Description:
Now in B-format paperback, this book describes ten women over the past three hundred years who have found walking essential to their sense of themselves, as people and as writers.
Wanderers traces their footsteps, from eighteenth-century parson’s daughter Elizabeth Carter – who desired nothing more than to be taken for a vagabond in the wilds of southern England – to modern walker-writers such as Nan Shepherd and Cheryl Strayed. For each, walking was integral, whether it was rambling for miles across the Highlands, like Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt, or pacing novels into being, as Virginia Woolf did around Bloomsbury.
Offering a beguiling view of the history of walking, Wanderers guides us through the different ways of seeing – of being – articulated by these ten pathfinding women.

Great State
The White Ship
Dead Doubles
The Five : The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper
A Brief History of Germany
The Battle of Britain
Sea Change
Barbarossa
The Gates of Europe
The Art of Resistance
The Swift and the Harrier
Muse
Katharine Parr
The Runner's World Big Book of Running for Beginners : Lose Weight, Get Fit, and Have Fun


