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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my Top 5 Favorite Books of All Time!
Peter Jenkins story of his 1973-1975 walk from New York to New Orleans is one of those books that you just can not put done once you have started. You will find yourself thinking about the book when you should be doing other things and you can't wait to pick it up again. When I finished reading the book I wanted more. I even purchased the old April 1977 National...
Published on June 23, 2000 by Curtis J. George

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars It is okay, not great, but okay
You know, I think I expected something more along the lines of Least Heat-Moon's Blue Highways. It pales in comparison. It has its moments but most of the time I found myself getting irritated by the guy. As a "finding yourself" autobiographical piece it will pass but just barely. I give him kudos for being young and for this being his first book.
Published on January 5, 2009 by thefensk


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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my Top 5 Favorite Books of All Time!, June 23, 2000
By 
Curtis J. George (Centreville, Maryland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Peter Jenkins story of his 1973-1975 walk from New York to New Orleans is one of those books that you just can not put done once you have started. You will find yourself thinking about the book when you should be doing other things and you can't wait to pick it up again. When I finished reading the book I wanted more. I even purchased the old April 1977 National Geographic Magazine to read his article that he wrote for them and see even more of the pictures of his journey. Luckly, Jenkins journey does not stop in New Orleans, his walk continues and so do his books: The Walk West, The Road Unseen, Close Friends, and Across China.

Peter Jenkins says, "I started out searching for myself and my country and found both." The story would have been good enough just hearing about the trip, the things that he saw, how he survived, and the companionship of his faithful dog; but what make the book great is the people. The people that he meets, how they accept him, and in some cases don't. It is the sociology as well as the adventure that make this one of the best books I ever read for pleasure.

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting story with interesting ideas, June 25, 2006
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
Even before I had ever heard of this book, I wanted to do what Peter Jenkins did and just hit the road. So my judgement might be more than a little biased.

Nevertheless, I thought this was a very good read. There's at least two levels to the book. The first of course is the journey. Some guy walks from Upstate New York to New Orleans. How could that be boring? It's a really good story with adventure, freindship (I felt like I knew his dog), thrills, big thoughts, a little bit of romance at the end, and most impoartant of all, great characters.

That brings me to the second level of this book. The characters Jenkins meets make you stop and think. From the poor black family that invited him into their meager home for several months, to the lonesome mountain hermit, and the Guv'nah of Alabamy. I don't want to sound like an after-school special, but Jenkins's experiences make you rethink your assumptions and sterotypes. Take the hippie commune farm, for example. I won't reveal the biggest plot point that occurred there, but one thing that really struck me was their pushiness. Even though hippies are "supposed to be" accepting, peaceful, and have a kind of "do whatever you want, man" attitude, they were relentless on pushing their ideas onto Jenkins, insisting that he join them and that their way of life was the best.

So in short, I say read this book. EVen if you don't want to get into the sociology of it, it can stand up as a fantastic adventure story. Heck, if I had a couple million dollars and could cram the whole thing into two hours (and still do it justice), I'd make it a movie, just so even more people could know about it.
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Instructional Tool, November 15, 2001
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
I have been using A Walk Across America, by Peter Jenkins as a required reading for over ten years, in The Lifestyle Enhancement class I instruct at Southeast Missouri State University. I also require: Tuesday's With Maurie. These two exemplary accounts of life and its meaning and purpose, serve as a primary source of motivation for the seventy five behavior change projects each student must engage in each semester.
At the conclusion of each semester I ask the over 100 students enrolled in all three sections, if I should reduce the required readings, by eliminating either book? The answer is an emphatic, no! I have included some comments from students presently enrolled in the class.
"This book definitely affected me in a positive way. I believe that I always look for the deeper meaning in things, and this book had a pretty obvious one. In a time period where everything is getting ready to change for me (I am graduating in May, moving, and starting a career), it made me realize that other people are scared too, and that you can be successful even if you are afraid and unsure now".
"Reading this book has made me think more about the decisions I've made in the past and now. I believe that my life is somewhat like Peter's life was before he decided to "walk". I have done, and still do a lot of things that other people expect of me. Don't get me wrong they are all beneficial things, but they are done for the wrong reasons. Things I do, choices I make should be for me, not for one that wishes they could've live their own life in a different way. I admire the fact that peter just decided that he was going to "walk" his life out. He now could have some control over the problems he faced and how he would, himself, solve them".
The words and tales Peter Jenkins described helped move my students out of their comfort zone, and created an amenability and impetus for change. A Walk Across America is an outstanding tool to create insight and pride in our country and most importantly the book serves as the motivation for students to walk out of the ordinary and into an extraordinary lifestyle.
Additionally, students are assigned a take home midterm and are asked to answer four questions about the book and must summarize each in two pages. I have included some student responses, which document the progress students have made in both intra and interpersonal growth. I am aware of no better way to get students to examine their lifestyle.
"I think that I will grow from this book, because it has showed me that I can do anything that I put my mind to. There is nothing that is impossible it is just a matter of me getting out there and doing it. This man trained himself, put his body through hell, and still was victorious in what he wanted to do. This also showed me that there is a great world out there and many great people. Sometimes it seems that when things are not going so well in my life that I want to blame it on other people. I now realize that I am the only person that can make myself happy. I am in charge of my own fate, and no one can take that away from me. The main thing that I learned from this book is that anything is possible once you put your mind to it. I want to leave this paper with one of my favorite quotes that I feel is most fitting for Peter Jenkin's story. "A Journey of a Thousand Miles begins with one step".
"I think I will grow by letting myself "walk" after graduation. I am not going to walk across the country, but I think I will explore my options a little more. Maybe it isn't so important that I get a job in my field immediately. There are some things I would love to do first and maybe this is the perfect time to try them."
I am certain, that without this classic book, A Walk Across America, I would not be able to move my students from where they begin to where they need to be.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Where do these ... reviewers come from, July 5, 2002
By 
Frederick Dellman (Mukilteo, Washington USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
...I am a professor at a well known, highly ranked college and before that for ten years a high school teacher.

For all the years I have been using A WALK ACROSS AMERICA in my classes, no book I have ever used has been so beloved and accessable and taught so much in Peter Jenkins' ever so subtle way to my students. That means, no book, including several classics. Of course, Jenkins book having been a best seller since 1979 and having had over 100 printings is no considered a classic...There is no travel book, and for that matter almost no other book, published in the last twenty years that can match the sales and reaction performance of A WALK ACROSS AMERICA.

Obviously no book appeals to everyone but A WALK ACROSS AMERICA comes close based on reactions over my fifteen years of teaching thousands of very opinionated students...

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A PLEASING READ, August 18, 2006
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
Read this one severl years ago, when it was first published, and it has stuck with me since that time. As other reviewers have pointed out, yes, the author can be a bit naive at times and no, he is not Heminway. This is the story of a young man on a personal journey. We do not even have to question his motives as they are his own. We do not have to agree with his conclusions, they they too are his own. The nice thing is, this young man took a journey, had an adventure and had the nerve to write about it. This book, and it's follow up "The Walk West," have been out for a number of years now and have been extremely successful. A lot of people have truely enjoyed them (myself included). This sort of work tends to draw out the rock throwers after a few years. Would strongly suggest you read this one yourself. It does not take that long and you will may quite well like what you find. As a added note: I note that several reviews have taken almost a venomous view as to the author's relationship to his traveling companion, a dog. While I agree, a dog is not a person, I do understand how the author could and apparently did become so attached to his pet. I travel with a dog, have for years, as my only companion, and you do tend to attribute qualities to your four legged fuzzy friend that many cannot see. All in all, recommend this one highly.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The story that continually inspires me, February 16, 2000
By 
When I was 18 and my great-grandmother was 78, she gave me this paperback, saying, "I loved this book! Full of laughter -- and tears." Almost twenty years later, I still consider it to be the best story I have ever read. It has inspired me to read more, write more, and especially, love my country and the people in it more. Peter Jenkins' printed words are so richly descriptive and heartfelt, the reader will know each character as a close friend and each location as if the Keds were his/her own! This is a timeless classic.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Getting past stereotypes, March 8, 2006
By 
Kathi R (So. CA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
I read this many years ago and am writing it from memory of that time. One thing that really impressed me about the book was that he got out of his comfort zone. He was challenged on his anti-Vietnam war and even somewhat anti-American views and challenged to get to know America. And so he did.

It was refreshing as he told of some of his stereotypes of say Southern rednecks and others and yet as he travels he gets to meet some of these people as people and realizes they were different than he had thought.

And then there was the Black family he ended up staying with. He tells of his fears and misgivings when he first encounters the young men but he gets past that and ends up living with them and getting to know them. We can see how his views are changed as he gets to know the different people.

With all the polarization these days as different people attack and talk about others of different ethnic, racial, political, religious or regional views without getting to know them, I remember how he got past that and actually got to know people who were different than he was. It blew some of his stereotypes and he was willing to get past that.

When the subject of race or different political groups has come up, I have recommended this book as it shows how he took the challenge and got to know people. More of us would benefit in getting to know people who are different than we are. We, like he did, will often find out that they are people just like us in a lot of ways.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Brave Journey That Changed One Man's Soul, September 12, 2005
By 
Notnadia (Currently upstairs.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
Peter Jenkins describes his life in the months leading up to his early 1970's odyssey in a way I can probably best sum up as "lost". Coming of age amid the political maelstrom of the late 1960's, the idealistic Jenkins had felt his faith in America's future slip away, he had a crisis of personal direction, and he was a man who had somewhere in his twenty-odd years fallen away from the hopeful dreams that had once shaped him as who he was. One day while talking with a friend about all the things wrong with the world, the nation, himself, Jenkins was half-seriously told that he should try to seek out the real America and see how much good there was in it. For a man who had become convinced his nation was mired in hopelessness, this challenge to find what was right in the US inspired him to begin a walk--yes a walk on foot-- that began along the Atlantic coast and would eventually end (in his second book) 4,000 miles away in the waters of the Pacific Ocean. Setting off with a backpack, his dog and a lot of courageous ambition, Peter Jenkins, who received backing in his mission from the National Geographic Society, began a meandering trek that took him through the rural countryside of a dozen states and finally, after being adopted by a devout black family in North Carolina, surviving a tornado, the loss of his best friend, walking pneumonia, intimidations by bullying thugs, and attempts to dissuade him from finishing his planned march to the ocean, Jenkins stops for a breather in New Orleans and there meets a woman who becomes the love of his life, and in short order, his bride. This book pauses here but the story of the Jenkins' (yes, his wife begins the walk west with him) hike across the Heartland to the Oregon coast is concluded in this book's sequel. Not only is this an interesting travelogue, and not only is it also the story of America at a particular time in its history, it is the memoir of a man's transformation from cynic back to glorious idealist, and from a spiritual doubter to a spiritually living human being.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best Book I ever Read, April 20, 2006
This review is from: A Walk Across America (Paperback)
I think Walk across America Was a grab you by the Brain and pull you in. The way he wrote the book you were there walking with him.I read this book 10 years ago and still tell people about it.
The people he meets on the way are true Americans. The one part I will never forget is the part about Church. This is something else. I could not put this book down. I think everyone would love this book. It has a little of all of us in it
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Life Altering Book, January 26, 2000
By 
I received a copy of A Walk Across America as a Christmas gift. Now exactly one month later I have finished not only that book but the sequel, A Walk West. Being a college student I do not have much time to read outside of my assigned readings. However with both of these books I set aside time to read them and most importantly contemplate what Mr. Jenkins was saying. I am 19 and Mr. Jenkins wrote this book over twenty years ago expressing thoughts and concerns that most teen-agers share today. I applaud Mr. Jenkins and thank him for sharing his story. Every child who is unsure about there path in life or is sure needs to read this book.
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A Walk Across America
A Walk Across America by Peter Jenkins (Paperback - Sept. 2001)
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