Walk Me to the Distance

Hardcover, 228 pages

Published 1985 by Ticknor & Fields.

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(1 review)

"Vietnam veteran David Larson can't go home again. Instead the Georgia native wanders westward into the desolate landscape of Slut's Hole, Wyoming, and seeks to integrate himself amid a hardscrabble cast of memorable locals. David is taken in by Sixbury, a one-legged widow, sheep farmer, and mother to a nearly adult mentally handicapped son. This rough-hewn family unit is later augmented when David becomes the unwilling guardian to Butch, a Vietnamese girl abandoned at a highway rest stop. A tragic turn of events moves the novel into violent territory that bridges western laconic traditions with southern gothic and interrogates our notions of home, family, duty, and the always uncertain responsibilities of the individual in society. First published in 1985, Walk Me to the Distance was Percival Everett's second novel, a hauntingly dark tragicomedy of the modern West, still clinging to a mythical heritage and code of frontier justice. With spare …

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Review of 'Walk Me to the Distance' on 'Goodreads'

Set in today's Wyoming, this early Everett novel is a brutal look at a mythologized West with its own peculiar sense of justice.

David Larson is a Vietnam War vet who decides to take up residence in Wyoming after he returns from the war. His life becomes bound to those of Chloe Sixbury, a tough old rancher with an adult retarded son Patrick, and later, of her adopted Vietnamese daughter, Butch.

The story is marked with rape and murder, and a weird mixture of skewed gothic South and old West tropes, but ultimately it is about the preciousness of family, in whatever form it chooses to take.