New Book on Pilgrimage Coming January 6

Pilgrimage: A Medieval Cure for Modern Ills, available for pre-order on Kindle now, available for free through Kindle Unlimited, available in paperback on January 6!

On May 1, 2002, I staggered into Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, France under the cover of darkness, around 10:30pm, following a small pack of newbie pilgrims into the old town and up to the pilgrims office. A few minutes later, one of the hosts escorted me to the municipal hostel, where the lights were already out and the snore-chestra was in full effect. My pilgrimage had begun.

It hasn’t finished yet. For nearly half my life now, pilgrimage has been a constant companion. Sometimes, I walk for the sheer satisfaction of discovery and adventure. Others, I walk with my students, leading groups in Spain, France, and Italy, an experience that has proven to be the richest and most satisfying of my teaching career. On still other occasions, I walk as a guidebook author, tracking fine details and often repeating stages to explore multiple variants.

Pilgrimage: A Medieval Cure for Modern Ills by [Dave Whitson]
In some ways, the underlying motivations behind all this walking are straight-forward enough. I like walking, and I’m really good at it. I love the aesthetics of medieval Europe and the lifestyle of contemporary Europe, and I’ve often had good reason to enjoy a multi-week vacation from the USA. I’m always excited to see what’s around the next corner, and I’m rarely discouraged when it’s just more of the same. There are other corners to come, after all. I crave uphill. I could (and have) eat tortilla and drink café con leche three times a day for weeks and not tire of either.

And yet, for all that, I have a hell of a time explaining why I keep doing this, to both myself and others. The absence of faith is a significant piece of that. To the extent that I’ve changed over the years–from abrasive atheist to open-minded agnostic–that hasn’t brought about any devotional element. The desire to better understand belief and believers felt like a sufficiently rational justification in my early years of pilgrimage, but as the decades accrue, it seems lacking.

Over this past summer, I was walking the Via Podiensis in France. We had dinner with our hosts, and–as is often the case with dinners in France–it was absolutely delicious. Every course was better than the last. Of course, food always tastes better when you’ve walked yourself into exhaustion. But this was excellent! Even in English I would have struggled to convey how much I appreciated it; behold my meager descriptive efforts here. In French, though? “This is good!” and “I like this very much!” don’t move the needle much, I’m afraid. I lacked the vocabulary. I couldn’t articulate it to myself or to others.

The same has been true with pilgrimage for years. So, when COVID shut down my trans-USA walk on the American Discovery Trail (and literally everything else), and I moved past the sulking stage, I decided it was an opportunity to pursue answers. Over three intense months, I dived deeply into this grand human tradition, studying pilgrim memoirs from all around the world, and also academic studies of pilgrimage. I revisited conversations I had with pilgrims over the years on the Camino Podcast. While walking pilgrimages in Western Europe remained central to this, I gradually expanded my frame of reference, which included learning quite a bit about pilgrimages in India, reading about the hajj, and encountering routes and shrines I’d never previously heard of or considered.

Somewhere along the way, it occurred to me that this medieval (ancient, really) tradition was enjoying a dramatic resurgence specifically because it met some of the most significant needs that we face today as individuals and societies. This, in turn, led me into related research from the social and health sciences, exploring contemporary concerns: we are more sedentary than ever, we spend our days sitting, we are depressed and lonely, we are disengaged from and disenchanted with work, we distrust… practically everyone, our traditional communities and gathering places have fragmented and broken, and we have a collective crisis of faith. It’s bleak stuff. And yet, it was also clarifying, as it helped reinforce just what makes pilgrimage so edifying and rewarding.

My short book, Pilgrimage: A Medieval Cure for Modern Ills (available for pre-order on kindle now; available as a paperback beginning January 6), synthesizes all of those pieces, weaving together contemporary challenges, personal memoirs, and research findings on pilgrimage’s impact from all around the world. This is not my story; it’s our story, and the story of pilgrimage’s power in the 21st century.

This is my explanation for why I keep walking. I hope it lends insight to your journeys as well.

11 thoughts on “New Book on Pilgrimage Coming January 6

  1. Wow. Count me in!! Everything you say is considered, and something that should be listened to- like your beautifully done and well crafted podcasts. I miss the, and so do friends of mine that also keep re-listening to them.

    Thank You for doing this!!

    1. Thank you, Tom–I appreciate it! And new episodes are on the way, hopefully popping up beginning in January.

  2. Bonjour Dave! I am keen to get the paperback version … can we get it to Australia somehow? Is it possible to have the book inscribed?

    1. It will be available through Amazon.au beginning January 6! Hmm… inscription would be harder. Maybe I can figure out a name plate or something?

  3. Dave, knowing this book is coming makes me so happy! To think that you took a single project to this–a life changing experience for so many–is impressive. I will certainly buy this book for my family. I love that you never stopped walking!

    1. I’m so glad to hear from you, Ellen, and grateful to you for taking a look at this. I hope you’ve had a great holiday!

      1. Ordered it today! SO looking forward to reading it, though at 81, I’m not likely to ever do any of this in person! 🙂 What strikes me as really wonderful is that so few people follow their passion (for all kinds of reasons, often financial) but you DID! Bravo YOU! Keep walking!

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