cover image Walking the Americas: 1,800 Miles, Eight Countries, and One Incredible Journey from Mexico to Colombia

Walking the Americas: 1,800 Miles, Eight Countries, and One Incredible Journey from Mexico to Colombia

Levison Wood. Atlantic Monthly, $27 (304p) ISBN 978-0-8021-2749-5

British explorer Wood (Walking the Nile, Walking the Himalayas) narrates in lamentable fashion another formidable trek, this time his travels across Central America—a journey that spans eight countries and includes the harrowing jungle of Panama’s Darién Gap. Wood’s subject matter is fascinating, but the prose often ambles into cliché (he is caught “sweating buckets” or worrying that his crew had “bitten off more than we could chew”), and though he offers historic asides and insights into the politics of the region, these don’t offer much depth. At times his descriptions of the locals become caricatures: he imagines a Mayan man’s “forefathers, naked except for a jaguar skin and a bow, perhaps a feather in… [their] hair.” As Wood hikes southward, he sees migrants making the treacherous journey north toward America and Canada, but misses the opportunity to offer anything beyond a passing glance. Wood’s crossing of the Darién Gap with his support team of indigenous locals and a clearance from Panama’s border police is anticlimactic. The narrative feels tired, but fans of Wood’s previous books will certainly welcome another journey with him. (Mar.)