*3.5 stars*
Benny and Stephen are two completely diverse characters. Their conversations are mundane. Here are two guys who knew each other years ago at school, then saw very little of one another until Stephen returned from Uni in London.
They now meet for a Friday night pint, but there’s an awkwardness between them, the same conversations over and over again, difficulty in articulating their thoughts to each other, and they seem to have opposing views on everything. But it’s what these two don’t say that’s important to this storyline, the thoughts that are never transferred into words.
Benny had invited Stephen to join him on his upcoming walking trip after a boozy drinking session at the Miners Arms - big mistake! Benny had intended doing this walk with his dad just like they did years ago - unfortunately his dad became ill and passed away, so it was going to be a solo walk in honour of his dad, a kind of pilgrimage. And then he went and opened his big mouth (the beer talking obviously) and suddenly Stephen became a part of it all! The realisation had Benny silent screaming into his pillow!
Offa’s Dyke in Wales is the chosen route for this walking trip, and Benny decides there are to be no distractions from the outside world, no checking social media accounts - that’s the point of this walking trip, to get away from it all, get back to nature.
However, these two really do irritate each other, and as the walk progresses, they run out of money, have barely any food, and as other calamities befall them, let’s just say that it becomes the walking trip from hell!
The amount of things that go wrong for Benny and Stephen pushes them both to their limits, and although it produces some amusing as well as distressing moments, I found the human element to be really quite moving at times.
*I was invited to read ‘Walk’ by the publisher and have given an honest unbiased review in exchange*