Pilgrimages--real and imagined--are always popular, sometimes
compulsory. Bodh Gaya, Santiago, Mecca, Jerusalem, and Puri are a few of
the sites that beckon. The pilgrimage to the authentic self takes a
similar path in an interior landscape. In the 15th century, Felix Fabri
combined the two, using his visits to Jerusalem to write a handbook for
nuns wanting to make a pilgrimage in the imagination, whilst confined to
their religious houses. For Guidebook for an Armchair Pilgrimage, the
authors followed Fabri's example. First they walked together over many
weeks, not to reach a destination but simply to find one. Then, in
startling words and images, along lanes and around hills, into caves and
down to the coast. Over the course of the 19-day Armchair Pilgrimage,
they invite the reader to experience the world around them just as they
did as they walked.