A Walking Life Reclaiming Our Health and Our Freedom One Step at a Time

A Walking Life Reclaiming Our Health and Our Freedom One Step at a Time

For readers of On Trails, this is an incisive, utterly engaging exploration of walking: how it is fundamental to our being human, how we’ve designed it out of our lives, and how it is essential that we reembrace it.
“I’m going for a walk.” How often has this phrase been uttered by someone with a heart full of anger or sorrow? Or as an invitation, a precursor to a declaration of love? Our species and its predecessors have been bipedal walkers for at least six million years; by now, we take this seemingly arbitrary motion for granted. Yet how many of us still really walk in our everyday lives?
Driven by a combination of a car-centric culture and an insatiable thirst for productivity and efficiency, we’re spending more time sedentary and alone than we ever have before. If bipedal walking is truly what makes our species human, as paleoanthropologists claim, what does it mean that we are designing walking right out of our lives? Antonia Malchik asks essential questions at the center of humanity’s evolution and social structures: Who gets to walk, and where? How did we lose the right to walk, and what implications does that have for the strength of our communities, the future of democracy, and the pervasive loneliness of individual lives?
Publisher Little, Brown and Company
Author Antonia Malchikد
Country USA
Publication Date 10/03/2021
Pages 272
Edition first
Size 14.53 x 2.34 x 21.67 cm
About the Author Antonia Malchik has written essays and articles for Aeon, the Atlantic, High Country News, BuzzFeed Ideas, Orion, and a variety of other publications. Formerly, she worked as a journalist in Austria and Australia. She lives in northwest Montana with her family.
Publisher Address infio@hachettebookgroup.com
ISBN ISBN-139780738234885