The Denver Post

Watching writers pace the streets in “Walker”

- NOnfIctIOn the Walker Qy Flruy Sesgly

© The New York Times Co.

Here’s a time capsule from a foreign era.

In 2014, a BBC article bewailed “The Slow Death of” — wait. You fill in the gap. Where does your mind lead you, here in the depths of 2020? “The Slow Death of Democracy”? “The Climate”? “Your Savings”? “Communal Life”?

No; the headline lamented “The Slow Death of Purposeles­s Walking”

( awe- struck italics mine). What a time, when the decline of dawdling could inspire such sincere regret.

And yet, in our plague year, a new book — Matthew Beaumont’s passionate, profoundly chaotic “The Walker” — again grouses about how we walk, where and why, this time connecting the changes in our gait to the transforma­tion of our cities and social bonds. It’s the slow death of purposeles­s walking as symptom of the slow death of democracy, of the human.

Beaumont is the author of a previous book on the subject, “Nightwalki­ng,” a “nocturnal history” of London. In it, he quoted Roberto Bolaño on the “two opposite types” of people you meet late at night: “those running out of time and those with time to burn.”

In contrast, Beaumont selects his new subjects ( most of them authors) for their relationsh­ip to their particular time — for their allergy to their era. These writers are the “indicator species,” he says, taking a term from biology; from their suffering ( and the suffering of their characters) we can extrapolat­e the sickness of their age — which is to say, Beaumont writes, the sickness of capitalism. He profiles some of literature’s most obsessive pedestrian­s and fluent malcontent­s, for whom walking was both “spiritual imperative” and psychologi­cal torment of a very productive kind — Poe,

Ford Madox Ford, Dickens.

A breakthrou­gh: The heroically cogitating, exquisitel­y sensitive, cruelly alienated solitary male consciousn­ess is finally getting his due! Beaumont is at least a bit sheepish on this score. He nods at the stories that go missing in his narrative, acknowledg­ing, for example, Lauren Elkin’s excellent “Flâneuse,” a study of female walkers of the city, including Jean Rhys, Sophie Calle and Agnès Varda.

Beaumont does include a section on Virginia Woolf and her great London novel, “Mrs. Dalloway,” only it’s not Clarissa Dalloway who concerns him but shellshock­ed Septimus Smith, whose bloody hallucinat­ions reveal the violent underpinni­ngs of imperial London. Beaumont argues that Smith, like Poe’s narrators, possesses the clarity of the convalesce­nt, for whom everything is new, painfully vivid, exaggerate­d and yet somehow truthful. It’s a quality of attention held holy in this book. Beaumont deplores its degradatio­n, whether by the capitalist injunction to hurry, scurry, produce and consume or by the smartphone, which hijacks our gaze and prevents us from noticing how “public space is covertly being colonized by corporate interests and reinvented as an archipelag­o of private spaces to which ordinary citizens have at best limited access.”

Borrowing from Baudelaire’s descriptio­n of the flâneur as a “kaleidosco­pe gifted with consciousn­ess,” Beaumont calls the distracted walker “a smartphone endowed with consciousn­ess.”

Easy target, that. Beaumont is perfunctor­y on the more interestin­g and important questions about the takeover of public spaces — for whom have these spaces been “public”? Who are these “ordinary citizens”? He gestures to the experience­s of those excluded from the city, asserting that his goal is to harness the particular gaze of the “privileged” writers to freshly regard the city, and to make it less exclusive. He may worry about “the marginaliz­ed,” but he rarely if ever cites or consults their work.

Even as Black artists have complicate­d, adopted, parodied the notion of flânerie, they are absent here — an omission that feels striking given Beaumont’s phosphores­cent erudition ( and his advanced case of quotomania). His book fairly buckles under its references to the great theorists of walking, the body, the city. All the usual suspects are present, although at times deployed strangely. Ray Bradbury is endowed with his own section while Walter Benjamin, as significan­t a figure imaginable where such subjects are concerned, hovers at the edges of scenes, solicitous­ly holding up a tray of useful quotations.

Writing and walking have shared a long associatio­n. Dickens thought nothing of tramping 30 miles into the country for breakfast — and that after long nights traversing London, composing on the fly. He might have crossed paths with Thomas De Quincey, who floated over the city on opium fumes. The serious walkers of our era include Philip Roth, who would punctuate his morning work with a 5- mile walk. In almost any weather, you’ll still see Vivian Gornick flying down Seventh Avenue for her afternoon constituti­onal.

When they’re not walking, writers are busy extolling walking, frothing on about creativity and movement. I wonder if it isn’t because they’re a little embarrasse­d about how much time they spend sitting. No treatises to that, you’ll notice, their real specialty.

Schopenhau­er described walking as “a continuous­ly checked falling.” Is writing any different? What distinguis­hes Beaumont’s book, for its doggedly narrow focus, is how it mimics — in form, excess, annoyance — the very experience it extols, of moving through the city.

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