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  • Published: 7 May 2022
  • ISBN: 9781784709921
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 272
  • RRP: $29.99

Waypoints

A Journey on Foot




A spellbinding travel book, which explores the psychology of pilgrimage, wilderness and walking.

A spellbinding travel book, exploring the psychology of walking, pilgrimage, solitude and escape.

'An extraordinary, dreamlike journey through West Africa' Adharanand Finn

At the age of twenty-seven and afraid of falling into a life he doesn't want, Robert Martineau quits his office job, buys a flight to Accra and begins to walk. He walks 1,000 miles through Ghana, Togo and Benin, to Ouidah, an ancient spiritual centre on the West African coast.

As he travels alone across rainforest, savannah and mountains, Martineau meets shamans, priests, historians, archaeologists and kings. Through the process of walking each day, and the lessons of those he encounters, Martineau starts to build connections with the natural world and the past - and, at last, to find the meaning he craves.

'Marvellous... A book about how to travel' Jay Griffiths, author of Wild
'[Martineau's] story, beautifully written, of how his pilgrimage of sorts changed him forever' Evening Standard

  • Published: 7 May 2022
  • ISBN: 9781784709921
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 272
  • RRP: $29.99

Praise for Waypoints

An epic journey and a book worthy of it. A thrilling and poignant meditation on the elusive reasons for getting out of bed in the morning; a dazzling kaleidoscope of colour, sensation, and time. An important new voice has arrived.

Charles Foster, author of 'Being a Beast'

This is a book about how to travel: curious, observant, informed and poignantly honest. It is a marvellous and sensitive portrayal of the author's inner and the outer world.

Jay Griffiths, author of 'Wild: An Elemental Journey'

Waypoints wonderfully explores how walking animates resilience in times of stress, anxiety and worry, illustrating, through personal experience, how the journey is often our collective human goal.

Shane O'Mara, author of 'In Praise of Walking'

Stepping out in the spirit of Bruce Chatwin and Rebecca Solnit, Robert Martineau ranges through forest and desert, literature and philosophy, in search of an answer to why we are drawn to wander. Although he walks over a thousand miles, Waypoints is less a tale of endurance than a form of meditation. In elegant, searingly honest prose, he treads the same line as John Muir, for whom 'going out was really going in'.

David Farrier, author of 'Footprints'

Waypoints is an insightful, personal and genuinely moving account of what can be achieved with two feet, a backpack and a desire to keep on going... Waypoints is a rousing celebration of all that can be learned by getting off the path - this is an exceptional debut.

Vybarr Cregan-Reid, author of 'Footnotes'

Waypoints takes you into Africa in a different way, an intimate and grounded way that made me want to visit. What more can you ask of a book?

Robert Twigger, author of 'Red Nile'

Waypoints is a paean to the transformative power of a long journey on foot, and to walking's capacity to define and illuminate our sense of self. Martineau writes with remarkable intelligence and honesty, and a singular reverence for the people and places he encounters along the way. A magnificent book.

Ben Saunders, polar explorer and endurance athlete

His touch is light, his brushwork vivid, the account is full of surprises and refreshingly free of pomposity... A poignant illustration of the random kindness of strangers.

Michela Wrong, author of 'In the Footsteps of Mr Kurtz', 'Borderlines' and 'Do Not Disturb'

An astonishing dream-like journey... Martineau has written a deeply affecting book which sears itself on the memory like the sun of the western Sahel.

Philip Marsden, author of 'Rising Ground', 'The Spirit-Wrestlers' and 'The Crossing Place'

This is a vivid, beautifully observed account of a trek through West Africa, but its true power lies in the way Martineau's deeply personal journey becomes a meditation on movement, belonging and being. Eclectic, spare, and at times redolent of Erling Kagge and Bruce Chatwin - there is a hint of greatness here.

Daniel Metcalfe, author of 'Blue Dahlia, Black Gold: A Journey into Angola'

A story of tenacity, told with humility, in a West Africa experienced deeply at the pace of a walk. I loved this book - its thoughtfulness, turn of phrase and lightness of touch as the author escapes one life to rediscover another.

Sophy Roberts, author of The Lost Pianos of Siberia

Terrific... a travel-writing gem.

Tim Butcher, author of Blood River

As soon as I picked it up, I couldn't stop reading... immediate and soulful and searching.

Pico Iyer

At the age of 27, Martineau, a lawyer in London, quit his job and embarked on a 1,000 mile walk with a backpack through West Africa... This is his story, beautifully-written, of how his pilgrimage of sorts changed him forever.

Evening Standard

With just forty possessions on his back, he walks, remembers, reflects and encounters. Martineau weaves together philosophy (Nietzsche, Thoreau), history (the slave trade and its scars) and glorious descriptions of the landscape, all the while demonstrating the power of walking to heal mental wounds.

Tatler

Tired of long hours at his desk in a London law firm, the 27-year-old flies to Ghana, and starts putting one foot in front of the other. His stroll ends up covering 1,000 miles and three countries... many people struggle with what's going on between their ears but [Martineau has] found a simple solution: get walking.

Daily Mail

An engaging meditation on life and walking and a fascinating glimpse into Martineau's interior journey.

Travel Writing World

An extraordinary, dreamlike journey through west Africa. The evocative, delicate writing leaves you feeling the very ground under his feet as he makes his way on this most astonishing pilgrimage in search of adventure and meaning.

Adharanand Finn, author of Running with the Kenyans

A wonderful book.

Giles Foden

Martineau segues effortlessly from practical desert challenges to striking encounters... [he] finds trust in the road and learns to trust his unrest... there is a sense that the waypoints he encounters inspire a new, and encouraging, optimism.

Caroline Eden, Times Literary Supplement

[Martineau] is fine and thoughtful company for the journey, sensitive to the fraught history of Europeans who have used Africa and Africans as a backdrop for their exploits

Washington Post