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9781509844593 61bdc60b5b3f6563b2bd5ce0 The Crossway https://www.midlandbookshop.com/s/607fe93d7eafcac1f2c73ea4/61bdc652c4f8b1721aa58d4c/41xqqaq6ikl-_sx328_bo1-204-203-200_.jpg
Winner - Edward Stanford Travel Memoir of the Year 2019. Shortlisted - Rathbones Folio Prize, Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize, and Somerset Maugham Award 2019. 'An extraordinary travelogue, strange and brilliant' - i In 2013 Guy Stagg walked from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the pilgrimage after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. Travelling without support, he had to rely each night on the charity of strangers. The Crossway is an account of Stagg's extraordinary journey. It describes the dangers he faced on the road, captures the people he met and the landscapes he experienced, offers a unique insight into contemporary faith, and – most movingly – lays bare his struggle to escape the past and walk towards recovery. It was a BBC Radio 4 'Book of the Week' on publication.
 
 

Review

Golden prose illuminates this moving account of a pilgrimage taken for the good of the author’s mental health . . . compelling . . . moving and thought-provoking Author: Peter Stanford Source: Observer

Having finished this account, I felt dazed. Dazed at the thought of all that I’d learnt from its pages about 2,000 years of Christianity, dazed at how immediate its author had made so many centuries-old stories feel, and dazed at the strangeness and brilliance of this extraordinary travelogue. Author: Rebecca Armstrong Source: i newspaper

The extraordinary story of a pilgrimage to find out the meaning of pilgrimage. Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters - an enlightening book from an exciting new writer. Author: Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

The journey is remarkable – a hike of thousands of miles across Europe, undertaken with rare bravery and stamina. But what is really extraordinary about Guy Stagg’s The Crossway is the writing – acutely sensitive, hyper-alert and unflagging in its exploration of the strange depths and by-ways of human belief Author: Philip Marsden, author of Rising Ground

Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters – an enlightening book from an exciting new writer. Author: Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

The journey as redemptive recovery is a well-worm trope, but there is no glib ending here. I really enjoyed this book Author: Sara Wheeler Source: Spectator

I loved it. Odd that a journey made to find salvation (a kind of 5,500 kilometre Stations of the Cross taking almost a year to walk) should turn out to be such a page turner. The reason is Stagg himself – an engaging, challenging, endlessly interesting companion who just happens to write formidably well. Travel writing has a bright new star. Author: Alexander Frater, author of Chasing the Monsoon

Guy Stagg makes a pilgrimage across Europe, into history and, most powerfully, the (troubled) interior of his soul. He takes us on a journey full of wonder and woe, poetry and pain; writing in prose that’s as sure-footed as it is unsettling in its honesty. A brave and beautiful account of a man’s search for meaning Author: Rhidian Brook, author of The Aftermath

A formidable achievement . . . This secular pilgrimage is a lively. Source: Country Life

A sublime, intense, and intimate account of a journey . . . Beautifully written, filled with strange encounters and extraordinary language Author: Philip Hoare, author of Leviathan

A gorgeous and moving book Author: Jamie Quatro, author of Fire Sermon

A marvellous book. There’s a lovely plainsongish immediacy to the telling that I found hugely beguiling, and (unusually) Stagg is as effective on people as he is on place. It’s also a generous piece of self-reckoning Author: William Atkins, author of The Moor

‘Such pitch-perfect prose that he has already attracted comparisons with Patrick Leigh Fermor’s celebrated accounts of his youthful travels’ Source: The Tablet

‘A gripping pilgrimage through faith and doubt . . . A first-rate writer, and a tough-minded one . . . he writes with a sort of rapturous exactitude about the peoples, climates and landscapes he meets’ Author: Boyd Tonkin Source: TheArtsDesk.com

Guy Stagg has bared his soul and soles in this epic account of walking from England through Italy, the Balkans, Istanbul, Cyprus, Lebanon and on to Jerusalem. His fabulously open hearted account easily bears comparison with the great walking and monastery books of Patrick Leigh Fermor, except he goes further in revealing the damage, and how it might be repaired . . . solvitur ambulando indeed! Author: Robert Twigger, author of Red Nile and Angry White Pyjamas

‘Stagg takes us on a journey full of wonder and woe, poetry and pain; writing in prose that’s as sure-footed as it is unsettling in its honesty. A brave and beautiful account of a man’s search for meaning.’ Author: Rhidian Brook, author of The Aftermath

The Crossway is moving and unique, with the sense that no one else can write like this about such places as the abbeys of France, the cities of Rome and Istanbul or the daunting landscape of pilgrimage and the often astonishing people whom Guy Stagg meets. At the book’s heart is his own story; troubled, he seeks redemption and hope. Does he find them? He makes his search into a story that is gripping and uplifting Author: Max Egremont, author of Forgotten Land: Journeys Among the Ghosts of East Prussia

After suffering years of severe mental illness, Stagg embarks on a journey from Canterbury to Jerusalem, hoping that the 5,500km walk along medieval pilgrim paths will heal him. Travelling alone, and relying on shelter provided by churches, monasteries and nunneries en route, he faces down many demons along the way, getting caught up in violent snowstorms, the demonstrations in Istanbul's Taksim Square, and a terrorist attack. A BBC Radio 4 "Book of the Week" at publication, it's one of the most compelling travel books I've read in a long time, as well as a thought-provoking meditation on what it means to have faith in our turbulent contemporary world Source: Bookseller

‘I loved it. Stagg is an engaging, challenging, endlessly interesting companion who just happens to write formidably well. Travel writing has a bright new star.’ Author: Alexander Frater, author of Chasing the Monsoon

Behind the cliché of the most important journey in life being the one taken inside oneself lies a timeless and powerful and vital truth: that the goal of such a quest, with all its anguish and revelation and excruciating realisations, is a place of great and lasting calm. This is the core of Guy Stagg’s necessary and beautiful book. Author: Niall Griffiths, author of Grits

The Crossway is a gentle, kind, generous-spirited book, rich in detail, encounter and history. But most importantly, this is the story of a young man, from a secular world, who undertakes a pilgrimage to try and mend himself – a courageous inner journey. Author: Neil Griffiths, author of As a God Might Be

What a privilege it's been to read this compelling and moving book, to travel with a writer who records everything he sees and feels with such care and passion. The writing is beautiful and his voice so engaging, so unflinchingly honest, throughout. I finished The Crossway and just wanted the author to keep walking. Author: James Macdonald Lockhart, author of Raptor

From the Author

Guy Stagg was born in 1988 and grew up in Paris, Heidelberg, Yorkshire and London. The Crossway is his first book.

From the Inside Flap

Longlisted for the RSL Ondaatje Prize 2019 A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK ‘An extraordinary travelogue, strange and brilliant’ i In 2013 Guy Stagg made a journey from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the pilgrimage after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. Travelling without support, he had to rely each night on the charity of strangers. The Crossway is an account of Stagg’s extraordinary journey. It describes the dangers he faced on the road, captures the people he met and the landscapes he experienced, offers a unique insight into contemporary faith, and – most movingly – lays bare his struggle to escape the past and walk towards recovery. ‘Golden prose illuminates this moving account of a pilgrimage taken for the good of the author’s mental health’ Observer ‘A beguiling portrait of one young man’s search into the hidden corners of Europe’ Sunday Times ‘Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters – an enlightening book from an exciting new writer’ Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

From the Back Cover

Longlisted for the RSL Ondaatje Prize 2019 A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK ‘An extraordinary travelogue, strange and brilliant’ i In 2013 Guy Stagg made a journey from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the pilgrimage after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. Travelling without support, he had to rely each night on the charity of strangers. The Crossway is an account of Stagg’s extraordinary journey. It describes the dangers he faced on the road, captures the people he met and the landscapes he experienced, offers a unique insight into contemporary faith, and – most movingly – lays bare his struggle to escape the past and walk towards recovery. ‘Golden prose illuminates this moving account of a pilgrimage taken for the good of the author’s mental health’ Observer ‘A beguiling portrait of one young man’s search into the hidden corners of Europe’ Sunday Times ‘Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters – an enlightening book from an exciting new writer’ Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

About the Author

Guy Stagg was born in 1988 and grew up in Paris, Heidelberg, Yorkshire and London. His book, The Crossway, is an account of Guy Stagg’s ten-month walk to Jerusalem. The author sets off from Canterbury on New Year’s Day, telling his friends and family only that he will be home before the year’s end, and was a runner-up for the inaugural Deborah Rogers Foundation Writer’s Award in May 2016.
 
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The Crossway

The Crossway

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  • ISBN: 9781509844593
  • Author: Guy Stagg
  • Publisher: Picador
  • Pages: 352
  • Format: Paperback
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Book Description

Winner - Edward Stanford Travel Memoir of the Year 2019. Shortlisted - Rathbones Folio Prize, Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize, and Somerset Maugham Award 2019. 'An extraordinary travelogue, strange and brilliant' - i In 2013 Guy Stagg walked from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the pilgrimage after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. Travelling without support, he had to rely each night on the charity of strangers. The Crossway is an account of Stagg's extraordinary journey. It describes the dangers he faced on the road, captures the people he met and the landscapes he experienced, offers a unique insight into contemporary faith, and – most movingly – lays bare his struggle to escape the past and walk towards recovery. It was a BBC Radio 4 'Book of the Week' on publication.
 
 

Review

Golden prose illuminates this moving account of a pilgrimage taken for the good of the author’s mental health . . . compelling . . . moving and thought-provoking Author: Peter Stanford Source: Observer

Having finished this account, I felt dazed. Dazed at the thought of all that I’d learnt from its pages about 2,000 years of Christianity, dazed at how immediate its author had made so many centuries-old stories feel, and dazed at the strangeness and brilliance of this extraordinary travelogue. Author: Rebecca Armstrong Source: i newspaper

The extraordinary story of a pilgrimage to find out the meaning of pilgrimage. Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters - an enlightening book from an exciting new writer. Author: Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

The journey is remarkable – a hike of thousands of miles across Europe, undertaken with rare bravery and stamina. But what is really extraordinary about Guy Stagg’s The Crossway is the writing – acutely sensitive, hyper-alert and unflagging in its exploration of the strange depths and by-ways of human belief Author: Philip Marsden, author of Rising Ground

Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters – an enlightening book from an exciting new writer. Author: Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

The journey as redemptive recovery is a well-worm trope, but there is no glib ending here. I really enjoyed this book Author: Sara Wheeler Source: Spectator

I loved it. Odd that a journey made to find salvation (a kind of 5,500 kilometre Stations of the Cross taking almost a year to walk) should turn out to be such a page turner. The reason is Stagg himself – an engaging, challenging, endlessly interesting companion who just happens to write formidably well. Travel writing has a bright new star. Author: Alexander Frater, author of Chasing the Monsoon

Guy Stagg makes a pilgrimage across Europe, into history and, most powerfully, the (troubled) interior of his soul. He takes us on a journey full of wonder and woe, poetry and pain; writing in prose that’s as sure-footed as it is unsettling in its honesty. A brave and beautiful account of a man’s search for meaning Author: Rhidian Brook, author of The Aftermath

A formidable achievement . . . This secular pilgrimage is a lively. Source: Country Life

A sublime, intense, and intimate account of a journey . . . Beautifully written, filled with strange encounters and extraordinary language Author: Philip Hoare, author of Leviathan

A gorgeous and moving book Author: Jamie Quatro, author of Fire Sermon

A marvellous book. There’s a lovely plainsongish immediacy to the telling that I found hugely beguiling, and (unusually) Stagg is as effective on people as he is on place. It’s also a generous piece of self-reckoning Author: William Atkins, author of The Moor

‘Such pitch-perfect prose that he has already attracted comparisons with Patrick Leigh Fermor’s celebrated accounts of his youthful travels’ Source: The Tablet

‘A gripping pilgrimage through faith and doubt . . . A first-rate writer, and a tough-minded one . . . he writes with a sort of rapturous exactitude about the peoples, climates and landscapes he meets’ Author: Boyd Tonkin Source: TheArtsDesk.com

Guy Stagg has bared his soul and soles in this epic account of walking from England through Italy, the Balkans, Istanbul, Cyprus, Lebanon and on to Jerusalem. His fabulously open hearted account easily bears comparison with the great walking and monastery books of Patrick Leigh Fermor, except he goes further in revealing the damage, and how it might be repaired . . . solvitur ambulando indeed! Author: Robert Twigger, author of Red Nile and Angry White Pyjamas

‘Stagg takes us on a journey full of wonder and woe, poetry and pain; writing in prose that’s as sure-footed as it is unsettling in its honesty. A brave and beautiful account of a man’s search for meaning.’ Author: Rhidian Brook, author of The Aftermath

The Crossway is moving and unique, with the sense that no one else can write like this about such places as the abbeys of France, the cities of Rome and Istanbul or the daunting landscape of pilgrimage and the often astonishing people whom Guy Stagg meets. At the book’s heart is his own story; troubled, he seeks redemption and hope. Does he find them? He makes his search into a story that is gripping and uplifting Author: Max Egremont, author of Forgotten Land: Journeys Among the Ghosts of East Prussia

After suffering years of severe mental illness, Stagg embarks on a journey from Canterbury to Jerusalem, hoping that the 5,500km walk along medieval pilgrim paths will heal him. Travelling alone, and relying on shelter provided by churches, monasteries and nunneries en route, he faces down many demons along the way, getting caught up in violent snowstorms, the demonstrations in Istanbul's Taksim Square, and a terrorist attack. A BBC Radio 4 "Book of the Week" at publication, it's one of the most compelling travel books I've read in a long time, as well as a thought-provoking meditation on what it means to have faith in our turbulent contemporary world Source: Bookseller

‘I loved it. Stagg is an engaging, challenging, endlessly interesting companion who just happens to write formidably well. Travel writing has a bright new star.’ Author: Alexander Frater, author of Chasing the Monsoon

Behind the cliché of the most important journey in life being the one taken inside oneself lies a timeless and powerful and vital truth: that the goal of such a quest, with all its anguish and revelation and excruciating realisations, is a place of great and lasting calm. This is the core of Guy Stagg’s necessary and beautiful book. Author: Niall Griffiths, author of Grits

The Crossway is a gentle, kind, generous-spirited book, rich in detail, encounter and history. But most importantly, this is the story of a young man, from a secular world, who undertakes a pilgrimage to try and mend himself – a courageous inner journey. Author: Neil Griffiths, author of As a God Might Be

What a privilege it's been to read this compelling and moving book, to travel with a writer who records everything he sees and feels with such care and passion. The writing is beautiful and his voice so engaging, so unflinchingly honest, throughout. I finished The Crossway and just wanted the author to keep walking. Author: James Macdonald Lockhart, author of Raptor

From the Author

Guy Stagg was born in 1988 and grew up in Paris, Heidelberg, Yorkshire and London. The Crossway is his first book.

From the Inside Flap

Longlisted for the RSL Ondaatje Prize 2019 A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK ‘An extraordinary travelogue, strange and brilliant’ i In 2013 Guy Stagg made a journey from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the pilgrimage after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. Travelling without support, he had to rely each night on the charity of strangers. The Crossway is an account of Stagg’s extraordinary journey. It describes the dangers he faced on the road, captures the people he met and the landscapes he experienced, offers a unique insight into contemporary faith, and – most movingly – lays bare his struggle to escape the past and walk towards recovery. ‘Golden prose illuminates this moving account of a pilgrimage taken for the good of the author’s mental health’ Observer ‘A beguiling portrait of one young man’s search into the hidden corners of Europe’ Sunday Times ‘Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters – an enlightening book from an exciting new writer’ Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

From the Back Cover

Longlisted for the RSL Ondaatje Prize 2019 A BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK ‘An extraordinary travelogue, strange and brilliant’ i In 2013 Guy Stagg made a journey from Canterbury to Jerusalem. Though a non-believer, he began the pilgrimage after suffering several years of mental illness, hoping the ritual would heal him. For ten months he hiked alone on ancient paths, crossing ten countries and more than 5,500 kilometres. Travelling without support, he had to rely each night on the charity of strangers. The Crossway is an account of Stagg’s extraordinary journey. It describes the dangers he faced on the road, captures the people he met and the landscapes he experienced, offers a unique insight into contemporary faith, and – most movingly – lays bare his struggle to escape the past and walk towards recovery. ‘Golden prose illuminates this moving account of a pilgrimage taken for the good of the author’s mental health’ Observer ‘A beguiling portrait of one young man’s search into the hidden corners of Europe’ Sunday Times ‘Completely absorbing, personal, often funny, and full of fascinating encounters – an enlightening book from an exciting new writer’ Sarah Bakewell, author of At The Existentialist Café

About the Author

Guy Stagg was born in 1988 and grew up in Paris, Heidelberg, Yorkshire and London. His book, The Crossway, is an account of Guy Stagg’s ten-month walk to Jerusalem. The author sets off from Canterbury on New Year’s Day, telling his friends and family only that he will be home before the year’s end, and was a runner-up for the inaugural Deborah Rogers Foundation Writer’s Award in May 2016.
 

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