The American Camino--Review (Hailey Hill)

    Drawing on phenomenology, personal narrative, and interviews with hikers, Redick examines how extended walking creates conditions for reflection, transformation, and re-orientation of self in relation to landscape and other people. American Camino invites readers to rethink the Appalachian Trail not as a scenic route or sporting challenge, but as a sacred threshold, a place where the ordinary boundaries of time, self, and purpose are unsettled. 
    In the end, American Camino invites readers to notice the trail not just as a place on a map, but as a landscape that runs through the inner self as well. Redick encourages a slower, more attentive way of moving through the world—one where meaning shows up in the small things: the rhythm of breathing, the steady fall of each step, the brief connections we make with others along the way. His book isn’t simply about hiking the Appalachian Trail; it’s a reminder that pilgrimage can happen anywhere, and that walking with humility, care, and curiosity can open us to a deeper sense of presence in our everyday lives.

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