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Walk Me to the Distance

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Now with a brilliant new package, a re-issue of the sophomore novel  by Percival Everett, New York Times bestselling author of National Book Award winner James.

Haunting, provocative and bleakly funny, Walk Me to the Distance is Percival Everett’s brilliant reexamination of the Western, and a laconic tragicomedy about what it takes to survive in the last days of a bygone big-sky country.

In self-imposed exile after returning home from the war in Vietnam, David Larson meanders into the barren town of Slut’s Hole, Wyoming, where a local widow takes him under her wing. After making a sort of home among the town’s hardscrabble locals, David grudgingly adopts a young Vietnamese girl abandoned along the highway. This sets in motion a set of tragic turns as Western mythos and frontier justice clash against the tides of a changing world.

First published in 1985 by Clarion Books, Walk Me to the Distance was the sophomore novel of an iconic American voice. Over the course of his five decade career, Everett has written over twenty five books and been shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize (for 2020’s Telephone), twice longlisted for the Booker Prize, and the recipient of the 2024 National Book Award for the “genius” (The Atlantic) James, a brilliantly imagined retelling of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn told from the enslaved Jim’s point of view. James was a #1 New York Times bestseller and is being developed into film by Stephen Spielberg.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1985

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847 people want to read

About the author

Percival Everett

69 books8,536 followers
Percival L. Everett (born 1956) is an American writer and Distinguished Professor of English at the University of Southern California.

There might not be a more fertile mind in American fiction today than Everett’s. In 22 years, he has written 19 books, including a farcical Western, a savage satire of the publishing industry, a children’s story spoofing counting books, retellings of the Greek myths of Medea and Dionysus, and a philosophical tract narrated by a four-year-old.

The Washington Post has called Everett “one of the most adventurously experimental of modern American novelists.” And according to The Boston Globe, “He’s literature’s NASCAR champion, going flat out, narrowly avoiding one seemingly inevitable crash only to steer straight for the next.”

Everett, who teaches courses in creative writing, American studies and critical theory, says he writes about what interests him, which explains his prolific output and the range of subjects he has tackled. He also describes himself as a demanding teacher who learns from his students as much as they learn from him.

Everett’s writing has earned him the PEN USA 2006 Literary Award (for his 2005 novel, Wounded), the Academy Award for Literature of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award (for his 2001 novel, Erasure), the PEN/Oakland-Josephine Miles Award for Excellence in Literature (for his 1996 story collection, Big Picture) and the New American Writing Award (for his 1990 novel, Zulus). He has served as a judge for, among others, the 1997 National Book Award for fiction and the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction in 1991.

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5 stars
125 (33%)
4 stars
153 (40%)
3 stars
77 (20%)
2 stars
13 (3%)
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6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 69 reviews
Profile Image for Judy.
1,948 reviews443 followers
November 2, 2022
I enjoyed Percival Everett's latest novel, Trees, so much I decided to read all of his books. I had somehow gotten the idea that this author was too...what? Brainy, deep? Well, he is all that but he sure knows how to give the reader a good time!

Walk Me to the Distance is actually his second novel. It is a wonderful study of the disillusioned Vietnam vet and a deep dive into the Wild West that still existed on the plains of Wyoming in 1970s America.

Rough, with its own codes of behavior. Vast with its big sky. I met characters I will never forget: David, the veteran; Sixbury, a one-legged, widow-lady sheep rancher; and a little Vietnamese war orphan who gets dropped into the vet's lap.

From that point on it gets more complicated every day as the frontier code comes up against a changing world. The novel was the perfect follow-up to the last book I read, Ennemonde.

Walking to the distance is a saying that means walking as far as one can see across the plains.
Profile Image for Cody.
968 reviews285 followers
May 23, 2025
A very humble, quiet novel with a lithesome arboreality to it. It’s nice to have a love story that doesn’t revolve around carnal rubby-rubby—there are too few of them. As only his second novel, it is better constructed than Suder and a crucial step toward his major evolution, Cutting Lisa. Not a bad accomplishment considering that the opening tableau of the novel is pretty much identical to First Blood. None of that Rambo hippie shit here, just a Vietnam vet acclimating without the assistance of an outrageously huge knife. File under: Aww.
Profile Image for Sentimental Surrealist.
294 reviews47 followers
June 20, 2017
A little short of one of my favorite Everett novels, for a couple different reasons. For one, having a developmentally disabled villain is cringe-worthy in 2017, and that's not a word I like to use in conjunction with Percival Everett but that's nonetheless where things are at. Plus it doesn't tie together its disparate threads - David's love for middle-of-nowhere Wyoming and his roommate Sixbury, David's sister's efforts to put him at the head of a Vietnam Veterans' rights group, the sudden appearance of a group of war orphans in Wyoming, the goings-on with said developmentally disabled villain... yeah, there's a lot going on here - as well as he did with later novels like Erasure or Percival Everett by Virgil Russell, nor does he buy the slight sense of disorganization with the picaresque approach of I Am Not Sidney Poitier. Yet David himself takes on a life of his own, and Everett has a deep understanding of his inner conflicts and impulses, and the guy's isolation in both his native Georgia and, as the novel goes on, his adopted home Wyoming are so real they'll bleed when you scratch them. This ultimately strikes me as a lesser work by a great author, but even then, it's worth your time. I don't know if Everett is quite the best living novelist in the United States, but he's definitely the best one that isn't frequently mentioned among that company.
Profile Image for Michael.
99 reviews18 followers
October 15, 2011
I loved reading this book. It's the kind of stuff that you wish Denis Johnson would be capable of when writing about characters other than himself. A brutally honest, torn-open voice, shocked and aggrieved by the world but still adult and making do, carving out a place for itself. The voice is appropriate to the story, which centers on a young man returning from service in Vietnam and settling down quite randomly in a small town in Wyoming. Everett isn't afraid to oscillate unpredictably between comedy, violence, and emotional discomfort. The ending doesn't necessarily work, but who cares. I imagine Everett's intention was to evoke the feeling of the landscape of Wyoming in narrative and language, and he pulled it off.
Profile Image for Joy D.
3,063 reviews316 followers
September 13, 2025
Vietnam veteran David Larson returns to Georgia after the war, but is rejected by his anti-war sister, so he travels westward and finds himself stranded in Slut's Hole, Wyoming. He takes what he thinks is temporary lodging with Chloe Sixbury, a widow who runs a sheep ranch with her developmentally disabled adult son Patrick. David becomes the unwilling guardian of a seven-year-old girl abandoned by her mother. The storyline follows David’s struggle to find home and family.

The novel seems to be a satire of an American western that blends in elements of southern Gothic. Everett portrays the Wyoming landscape as a harsh environment where living can be difficult and cruel, and frontier codes of justice still exist. As a note of caution regarding the book’s description as “darkly humorous,” I did not find anything remotely funny in this book, especially due to its inclusion of Everett is a masterful writer, and I plan to read everything he has written, but this is one did not quite work for me.
Profile Image for Eldal.
58 reviews3 followers
September 4, 2025
... he wondered if a man actively seeking to surrender could be captured

4 stars for this line alone
Profile Image for Heidi.
367 reviews9 followers
August 13, 2020
What in the hell did I just read??! I don't even know how to rate this book. Brutal and perverse, wooden characters, choppy chapters, abrupt ending. Bizarre.
Profile Image for readsbycoral.
31 reviews3 followers
October 15, 2025
“He watched the old woman hobble about. He studied her behind and thought of Patrick passing from the body of this sweet woman. Her strength moved him. He almost cried.”

Ever since there’s been a chill in the air and the nights are drawing in, I’ve been craving a gritty, dark and meaty read…Everett never lets me down. Walk Me to the Distance is reminiscent of Annie Proux’s writing, a narrative so detailed, nuanced and genius, and yet written with such delicious simplicity. It’s impossible to read one of Everett’s books and not ask yourself an abundance of questions about life, death, love, hate, endurance and pain, and ultimately the very lengths human beings will go to in order to survive.
Profile Image for Stephan Benzkofer.
Author 2 books15 followers
October 7, 2022
Walk Me to the Distance, Percival Everett's second novel, is a harder read than his first. I can envision some Suder fans having to reset expectations about this young author, and it is interesting to see that from the outset Everett was throwing curveballs and redefining genres.

Walk Me to the Distance reexamines the Western. It is spare and unsparing; no dashing heroes and clearcut villains here. The novel follows a Vietnam vet who has just returned from the war and ends up in Wyoming. Everett lets him live on a ranch, this is a Western after all, and there is a one-legged old woman and horses and a posse. But the vet is no cowboy; he finds work as a highway rest stop attendant.

The author is adept at letting the characters' words and actions define them, never succumbing to the temptation to add other explanations for the reader. Conversations are fragmentary and bounce around. A lot happens between chapters, between pages, between sentences.

I'm still percolating on this one. I'm currently rounding up to four stars from 3.5.
Profile Image for Gary.
552 reviews33 followers
April 20, 2022
Percival Everett may be the greatest novelist you've never heard of. I heard his name for the first time while watching the National Book Critics Circle awards last month, where he was given a lifetime achievement award. He has written a stack of books, and I got this particular one from the e-library because it was available. It is a modern Western. A Vietnam vet finds himself at loose ends and, by chance, in the minuscule Wyoming town of Slut's Hole -- so named by cowboys and never changed. The vet gradually finds a life, partly by conscious choice but mostly by falling into one unexpected set of circumstances after another. The writing is so skillful that every word of dialogue seems authentic and inevitable, even when it is outrageously improbable. This is a warmhearted book with sharp edges. I was impressed and want to read more.
Profile Image for Andre(Read-A-Lot).
681 reviews271 followers
November 5, 2025
Although, Percival’s trademark humor was muted in this second published novel, it still contains some zaniness in the narrative. I feel like he leaned into a satirical voice, maybe taking shots at the western novel genre. There are no clear racial designations inside these pages, and very little in the way of physical descriptions of characters. This was a light-hearted story with a touch of sadness as it involves a murder—ouch! The justification is debatable; some might view it as community justice, but the protagonist, David Larson, is compelled into hypocrisy.

David is an unusual character who seems to long for love but not really sure if the path to L o v e ! He settles in with an old sheep rancher named Sixbury, and he develops love for her, not the romantic type, but just the deep feeling of bonding and respect. A young girl is thrown into the mix, a Vietnamese orphan, perhaps to illustrate the ills of war with Vietnam. Anyway, I found the ending rather abrupt, and imagined several different conclusions. At the end of the day, it’s Percival Everett so it can’t be less than 4⭐️s!
Profile Image for Cara Dyksen.
90 reviews
Read
August 2, 2025
What the heck did I just read?!? Need some time to process before I can even begin to think of a star rating. Beautiful writing, but so. much. evil.
905 reviews20 followers
June 12, 2023
I am continuing my read through the novel of Percival Everett. I haven't hit a clinker yet. This is his second novel. It was published in 1985.

David Larson has just come back from Vietnam. Everett explains that "he returned as unremarkable as he had been when he left." He doesn't feel right about going back to his hometown in Georgia so he heads off across country. He ends up with a busted radiator in Slut's Hole, Wyoming and decides to stay.

He slowly settles in. He gets a room with an older woman and her "retarded" son and a job tending to a highway rest area. He begins to get enmeshed into this remote world. The people are hard but friendly. They tend not to ask too many questions and he starts to feel comfortable.

Everett is excellent at capturing a character with a few laconic lines of dialog. He slowly weaves in the violence and dark sides of this world. Larson tries to be a good man, but the challenge gets very complicated, particularly when, almost by chance, he ends up responsible for a grammar school aged Vietnamese girl who gets abandoned at the rest stop.

This is the first of the six Everett novels I have read where the protagonist is not black. It is still, however, about a man who is an outsider trying to fit in.

This does not have as much of the humor of his more recent books, and it has none of the surreal or slapstick that is in them. This is a very well-done character study built on a strong story and a fully realized setting.
Profile Image for Seajay.
374 reviews3 followers
November 24, 2024
I started my reading of Everett's books with his latest, James, have backtracked into several others, and hope to read everything in time.

This book has all the humor, mystique and tension of Telephone and Erasure. Early on, I was amused with the name of the town David lands in by accident: Slut Hole, WY. Very quickly the story evolves like a kaleidoscope into pathos, yearning, anger, confusion and even love, and back again. Like other of the author's novels, there is no resolution at the end. We are left to imagine what the characters' futures hold. Oddly enough, this is somewhat satisfying.

The writing style is spare and leaves much unsaid, absolutely appropriate to the subject matter, characters and wild west setting.
Profile Image for Stewart Mitchell.
534 reviews28 followers
March 13, 2024
Very good, very sad book. It features many of Everett’s trademarks but feels unique among his early novels, mostly because it’s just a stronger story with better characterization. There’s a lot of humor to be found, as usual, but it shines most in its quieter moments, and gives us a lot to wonder about when it’s done.

I’m glad I’m currently in the process of moving so I don’t have another one of Everett’s books within reach. If I did I would probably start it immediately and spoil myself.
Profile Image for Sarah.
150 reviews2 followers
July 17, 2025
Everett is hit or miss to me and this was a miss. It has all the pieces of an introspective, moody McCarthy-esque story about navigating PTSD as a veteran & dealing with disability in poverty. But it relies on shock value and contrivances that did not feel earned or needed. I see some reviews say the ending was abrupt but that’s where I disagree. The ending actually did feel earned to me but none of the middle did.
Profile Image for Patty.
186 reviews63 followers
Read
March 27, 2016
A super quick read, this one is gritty and a bit lurid. I enjoyed reading it, and even had a hard time putting it down. I wouldn't put it in my PE top 10 list, though.
Profile Image for Shelby Koning.
214 reviews28 followers
August 22, 2023
There's a lot to contemplate here. I'm going to need some time to digest this.
Profile Image for Paul Evans.
55 reviews
October 30, 2025
There's something not right in this novel. We can start with the Viking "re-packaging", post Pulitzer win for Everett. Fine, they want to sell his books. Well, I got suckered in and I'm not pleased. I suppose one can go deep into why this book had problems, but this is not a deep novel. Everett can't do "human"...He can do satire and humor and when he does it, he's a friggin genius. This? I understand it was his second novel and there's no denying he can write but the way he uses characters or throws them away under the guise of some PTSD journey is wrong. I don't believe it, I don't believe the characters. Some of them do and say some unforgivable things and some suffer greatly, but you'd never know it. Lots of trite, sentimental garbage with awful violence tossed in for shock value. Everett is a button pusher - fine, but if you're gonna do it, do it right. Patrick was the one character Everett could have done right, because most of the people around him contributed to his downfall. Instead we get Lennie from Of Mice and Men by way of Frankenstein. What if the violent and sexual moments were taken out of the equation? Hmmm...This book was gross.
Profile Image for Theresa.
568 reviews8 followers
Read
December 10, 2023
Walk Me to the Distance is dark. It has some similarities to Wounded, another of Everett's books. Of the books of his I've read, this is the least subtle study of human capabilities, of the anti-hero, a consistent theme of Everett’s.

I have to think more about this haunting story, before I care to say more. It leaves a lot for the reader to resolve.
1,322 reviews19 followers
October 17, 2025
Percival Everett's Walk Me to the Distance will surely haunt me for a while with its quirky characters and their unlikely alliances. David, a Vietnam veteran who hails from Georgia, winds up in rural Wyoming. He knows no one there, and is repeatedly asked why he doesn't have a Southern accent. He boards with Sixbury, a wise older woman who has a mentally retarded grown son living with her. Although he doesn't really need to get a job, David takes one maintaining a highway rest stop. One day while he is working, a Vietnamese woman abandons a small girl there. David and Sixbury wind up taking the girl in. Everett includes graphic, difficult sex scenes in this book, as well as violence.
513 reviews2 followers
September 3, 2025
Everett is such a fine, clever and original writer. This story is about a young Vietnam veteran, David Larson, and his life after service. He is a likeable but complex. He is generally a very sensitive and kind person, but he can also be mean and violent. He meets some very interesting people and encounters joy and pain and difficult decisions. I really enjoyed this book and would definitely recommend.
8 reviews
July 3, 2025
Exceptional. Everything Percival Everett writes is pure class. This story of frontier justice in the American West, set against the aftermath of the Vietnam War, is an exceptional piece of work from Everett. This early novel is a sign of how good he is as a storyteller. It’s also interesting to see how he would develop stylistically over time.
447 reviews2 followers
August 6, 2025
Despite covering some of the worst things that can happen to a human being - child rape, war, murder and disability, this felt like a very gentle book. I very much enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Jon Frankel.
Author 9 books29 followers
April 18, 2018
Walk Me to the Distance is Percival Everett’s second novel, published in 1985 and reissued in 2015 by the University of South Carolina Press. It is a simple story told in minimal prose with emotional restraint. David Larson returns from Vietnam. His parents have died while he was away, and his sister is an anti-war activist who calls him a baby killer. So he decides not to go home to Georgia but instead drives out west. His car breaks down in Slut’s Hole, Wyoming, a couple of hours in the middle of nowhere. While the car is being repaired he stays with Sixbury, a one-legged old woman living on a ranch with her developmentally disabled son, Patrick. He gets a job at the local highway rest stop and slowly falls into the life of the town. David is sure there’s nothing wrong with him but he is emotionally disconnected. He befriends Howard, the local veterinarian, who introduces him to a few women. The only love he is capable of is with prostitutes. Things don’t go well, but the town of Slut’s Hole is an accepting one. No one asks questions. Patrick runs off with Sixbury’s leg after a fight and they think he might have drowned. A Vietnamese family abandons a 7 year old girl at the rest stop and Sixbury and David take her in, naming her Butch. David becomes involved in a crime with a group of local men, and the police may be after them. It is hard to convey the emotional honesty and intensity of these events. In Everett’s hands though they make riveting reading. His prose is pitch perfect, austere, but able to evoke the great beauty of the west, and the rhythms of life and the speech of its people. And his story, of an emotionally paralyzed vet’s return to love and life, is funny, tragic and true.
Profile Image for Craig.
448 reviews3 followers
January 10, 2025
I was fascinated to read this early work by Everett because, while it has strands of the writing I know from his more contemporary novels, it doesn’t yet feature what I consider to be hallmarks of his style: biting wit and a playfulness with tone and ideas, even when the subject is serious.

At the center of “Walk Me to the Distance” is the story of a chosen family that forms among three characters who are not trapped, but stranded, as David the protagonist clarifies. The writing is as spare as the Western landscape, as unadorned as the characters’ emotional expression, and as brutal as their lives in the unfortunately named town of Slut’s Hole. (Fascinatingly, most of the characters in the novel are white, save for a Vietnamese girl whose entrance into the lives of a Vietnam vet and a one-legged rancher woman coalesces said family.)

Despite the economy of the language, the characters came alive and the emotional impact of the final chapters snuck up on me. While I’ve seen reviews that characterized the ending as hopeful, I closed this slim novel with a weight formed inside my chest. I likely won’t forget this book soon.
123 reviews
March 28, 2025
When I was in @thecorshambookshop and saw a newly published Percival Everett, I had to buy it. And it's set in Wyoming, near Sundance and Gillette, where we were last year, in proper cowboy land, with beautiful and harsh landscapes, lives and stories. David has returned from the war - the Vietnam War, and he wants to be anywhere but where he's from...driving and ending up in Wyoming...where he makes a life with an old woman, the people of Sluts Hole and a little girl abandoned at a local rest stop. As always with his books, it is brilliantly written, from the first lone of the book you are drawn in, the characters are superb and the way of life described so well...hard and shocking and full of community when things go wrong...there is violence and western frontier justice, and ridiculous events, it is definitely the badlands...marvellous
#booksreadin2025 #bookrecommendations #bookreview #booksreviewersofinstagram #betweenthecovers #percivaleverett #picadorbooks @picadorbooks
Profile Image for Daniel LeSaint.
273 reviews15 followers
August 12, 2024
This was amazing. Unique, unpredictable, a model specimen of American fiction…a classic of the post-Vietnam era you might say…and yet as of August 12th, 2024, 39 years after its first publication, there’s only 28 reviews on Goodreads. 28!?

Well clearly I don’t understand what drives popularity in book sales, but I’m grateful to have stumbled upon this author. On to his next…



“‘You're a good man. I'll help you as much as I can.’
With that he walked away.”



“How far to the edge?"
"That's the horizon," Sixbury said.
"How far?"
"It's a very great distance."
"Can we go there?"
"What?"
"Can we walk to the distance?"
Sixbury smiled. "We can try, but, no, we can't get there."
"Why?"
"Well, the distance is always the same.”
Profile Image for Wes Young.
336 reviews7 followers
January 18, 2009
This is a rather amazing work, made all the more so because it is only his second novel. human condition-type story. My 1st edition was signed in person, BONG!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 69 reviews

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