Windsor Star

HAPPY TRAILS TO YOU

Norwegian author’s book reminds us of the incredible power of a simple walk

- ILANA MASAD

In Praise of Paths: Walking Through Time and Nature Torbjørn Ekelund

Translated by Becky L. Crook Greystone

When I was 13, during a summer visit to my grandfathe­r’s house in Los Angeles, I fell in love with walking.

How or why is lost to me, but the visceral feeling remains.

Now, years later, I still walk every day, and I read as I go.

Norwegian author Torbjørn Ekelund is also a fan of walks. That much is clear from In Praise of Paths: Walking Through Time and Nature, translated by Becky L. Crook.

The book follows Ekelund’s meandering thoughts and footsteps over the course of a year or so after he suffered a seizure that landed him in the hospital with an epilepsy diagnosis that rendered his driver’s licence void. Instead of mourning the loss of his daily commute by car, Ekelund took to his new routine: walking to work, at first, and then everywhere else, too. Anyone who is now walking or biking more often — maybe even for the first time — might recognize his early reactions to the change: “Suddenly I could see paths everywhere, thoroughfa­res I’d never known existed. Narrow paths cutting across green lawns; animal paths through the woods; shortcuts through hedges, in and out of gardens, across fields and parking lots. I even became aware of my own ingrained patterns of movement throughout my house.”

For Ekelund, walking meant slowing down, and slowing down meant noticing things, paying more attention to the landscape in general but especially to its paths, which serve as both a lovely metaphor and a concrete reality. Paths are a communal effort, the result of humans, animals or both treading over the same bit of land over and over again, ensuring that the tracks of those who came before aren’t erased. A path is “organic and biodegrada­ble,” Ekelund writes; while it may be created by humans, it’s not intrusive to nature, especially because a path is also “temporary; its use and its existence are interdepen­dent. It is there because someone uses it and it is used because it is there. To maintain a path is to walk it.”

Trails are deliberate creations, made by humans for humans in a world where so many of us live at a remove from the earth, separated from it by asphalt and stairs, concrete and elevators.

Ekelund appreciate­s trails as much as paths, because they tend to be maintained by volunteers who invest their time in the work out of love, for the landscape and for the sport of walking, and because of the transforma­tive power they have on the people who walk them.

He shares stories of famous hikers and walkers of yore, from Bjørn Amsrud, the first man to journey from one end of Norway to the other on foot, to Emma Gatewood, who traversed the Appalachia­n Trail three times.

In Praise of Paths is at its best when Ekelund deals in specifics, such as the narratives of Amsrud and Gatewood, or the strange fact that when we’re lost in the wilderness we tend to walk in a circle for various reasons: One leg is generally longer than the other; one eye more dominant; heavy packs tend to throw off our balance. And the book is at its most emotional and poignant when Ekelund describes his own paths: the one he remembers from early childhood, the ones he and a friend take their children hiking on.

Sometimes, however, Ekelund’s prose becomes didactic in urging readers to walk more, and he occasional­ly makes sweeping generaliza­tions that don’t entirely ring true to fit a conclusion he’s already come to. At one point, he explains that Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe — “the Norwegian brothers Grimm” — must have walked slowly when collecting folk tales because “no one trusts busy people who rush around without taking in their surroundin­gs.” Ekelund also fully conflates movement through landscapes with walking, even though much of the pleasure, attention and awareness he discusses would be equally applicable to a wheelchair user.

In Praise of Paths is ultimately a charming read, celebratin­g the relationsh­ip between humans and their bodies, their landscapes, and one another.

The Washington Post

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCK PHOTO ?? Torbjørn Ekelund’s In Praise of Paths has an explanatio­n for why, when we’re lost in the forest, we tend to walk in a circle.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCK PHOTO Torbjørn Ekelund’s In Praise of Paths has an explanatio­n for why, when we’re lost in the forest, we tend to walk in a circle.
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