Especially compelling about the book’s prose is its clarity and frankness about the vulnerability of the unaccompanied female body on foot. Abbs doesn’t shy away from commenting on the same challenges faced by her historic walking mentors, who had to deal with menstruation, relieving themselves, finding safe places to sleep, or avoiding predatory male attention. None were postmenopausal when they undertook their legendary journeys. If I could be allowed one 'nitpick' in Windswept, it’s the book’s total lack of maps or pictures of the women and places Abbs writes about. But as a timely inspiration for all of us to get off the couch and walk—somewhere, anywhere—just for the sake of it, it’s one of the most exhilarating and masterful reflections ever on how to meaningfully move on our own feet and the remarkable women who made this a unique expression of their being.
Part memoir, part biography, part history, part rumination, Windswept is a fascinating, deeply thoughtful read. It delves into all sorts of questions about these eight women in particular, and about walking women in general ... She writes cogently about fear ... At times, Abbs veers too far into speculation as to why these eight women walked, or what it did for them, and at other times her musing wanders a little off course ... But these oversteps might just be evidence of Abbs' determination to get to the essence of what motivated these women ... Windswept is a thoughtful dive into how hiking settled the minds and calmed the nerves of eight women—as well as the author.
... [an] invigorating paean to the liberating power of rural rambles ... readers may rue the book’s lack of illustrations ... an investigative memoir, blending personal narrative with deeply researched cultural history to shed light on both. Unfortunately, while Ms. Abbs’s brief biographies are unfailingly interesting and even revelatory, the personal side of her book is less compelling ... On the cusp of empty-nesthood...Ms. Abbs scrambles in the wake of her subjects and strains to find common ground with them ... Too often, Ms. Abbs creeps into self-help territory ... The landscape, too, frequently disappoints. Majestic riverbanks and rugged mountainsides have devolved into ugly industrialized wastelands and asphalt highways by the time Ms. Abbs gets there ... Bloated by several forewords and afterwords, Windswept comes to feel like an overstuffed backpack ... Clearly, though, Ms. Abbs is passionate about her subject ... Reading about the unfettered freedom to roam enjoyed by these trailblazing women induced considerable vicarious pleasure—and envy.
The accounts are interspersed with snippets of the biology of the outdoors and the neuroscience of the process of walking, offering a truly interesting spin on why we all should walk. Abbs follows the trails used by her subjects whenever possible, with results that are sometimes thrilling and sometimes disappointing because of the changes that time has wrought ... This should be read by all women and those who love the outdoors.
... [a] beautiful and meditative memoir ... Abbs took a deep dive into her own psyche, coming to terms with her unusual upbringing in the Welsh countryside and her identity, which she contemplates in lyrical prose ... This lush narrative serves as the perfect excuse to get moving.