The Path is the journey of a lifetime to self-discovery. This is the story of a group of international travelers who walk the Camino de Santiago, the ancient five-hundred-mile pilgrimage from the Pyrenees mountains to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, northern Spain. Here are located the remains of James, the apostle of Jesus. The group includes people of all ages, all professions, and all religious affiliations or none at all. They include a sex-obsessed former captain in the British Army, a beautiful Danish businesswoman, a manic Austrian architect, a Welsh painter, a driven American priest, and a comic mother-daughter duo from Canada.The thirty-five-day walk is tough and demanding. They relate intellectually, spiritually, and sexually as they search for their own deep and personal truths, which are not always what they expect--or want--to find. The climax is a terrible and shocking death that changes their view of themselves forever as they arrive in the holy city.
Self Development I decided to read this book because I have been reading books on the Pacific Crest Trail, Appalachian Trail, even a book on a guy that hiked a pipeline, and other similar books. Thought this book would give me insight on hiking the Camino de Santiago. Well, I appreciated some of the historical stuff. Most of the book was about the relationships of those hiking the trail. Sort of like watching The Big Bang Theory or Seinfeld without the humor. Almost stopped reading the book a few times and decided to tough it out...not really sure why. However, for those who wants to read about the human condition without a particular direction...oh gee, I guess that is what life is...then this will be a good read. Unless bad language is a problem.
The Path by Malcolm McKay is a fictional story about the daily interactions of modern-day pilgrims walking the Camino de Santiago, a 500-mile pilgrimage from St.-Jean-Pied-du-Port, France to the tomb of St. James in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. The Camino is a metaphor for the spiritual and intellectual journey undertaken by this group of pilgrims. These Camino trekkers come to find their path in life; unlike the actual walkers who have a destination, a recognizable final point, these wanderers do not necessarily find their way--they come to the Camino lost and leave it without solution.
Mr. McKay's gasp of human nature is evident in the development of his complex characters. You will love or hate them; you will cry and laugh with them, you will be surprised with the plot twists, and you will find it hard to put the book down.
The only detractor is the book's lack of editing. If you can overlook these as you read, you will enjoy this book.