Within the spring of 2021, Neil King Jr. went for an extended stroll, stepping out from his residence within the nation’s capital and into the larger world.
King, a former Wall Road Journal reporter who reported from greater than 50 international locations, principally selected the slim shoulders of suburban roads as his path, and the lights of distant Walmarts as his guiding star. He set off to see and perceive a splintered America, strolling via Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York — ending his 26-day train “in sustained consideration and commentary” in Central Park.
“This was not a nature stroll,” King, 63, instructed The Inquirer just lately. “This was very a lot a human stroll.”
King chronicled his journey within the just lately revealed e-book American Ramble: A Stroll of Reminiscence and Renewal. He’ll go to the Central Library of the Free Library of Philadelphia on April 18 to debate his experiences in a dialog with former Every day Information and Inquirer editorial cartoonist Signe Wilkinson.
King spent most of his ramble in Pennsylvania, crossing the Mason-Dixon Line into York County from Maryland, then crossing Susquehanna into Lancaster County, one of many nation’s busiest farming counties. He delves deeply into the state’s position in historical past, its geography, and its position as a swing state.
“The great thing about the entire of it — the low solar, the silos like exclamation factors studding the hills — made me let loose a holler and perform a little dance,” King wrote of Lancaster County farmland.
Removed from D.C., in locations the place vehicles rule, King skilled some skepticism and distrust, just because he was strolling. He walked for hours, eager for a stranger to refill his empty water bottle. However each troublesome encounter was countered by moments of kindness and curiosity. Mennonite schoolchildren sang to King and a farrier bid him farewell with a bag of chocolate chip cookies.
“These spontaneous moments of kindness have been extra of the everyday response,” King mentioned.
King’s dialogue on the Central Library begins at 7:30 p.m. on April 18. http://libwww.library.phila.gov/calendar/occasion/119945