
This month’s Dispatch opens with a milestone I’ve been eager to share: the latest draft cover for my new book, a visual doorway into the stories and reckonings that shaped it. Culture Watch will highlight Paul White’s powerful SoftPower FulStories interview, where people too often forgotten take center stage; Paul Theroux’s Sir Vidia’s Shadow, a study in literary friendship and fracture, is my book review; and then I’ll highlight the haunting new series House of Spirits. I’ll close with a homily for my friend and fellow staffer Esther, whose passing reminds me why stories — and the people who carry them — matter. And as always, I’ll leave you with a few words others have shared about my work, reflections that help guide the road ahead.

Culture Watch

To contrast the lamentable dismantling of our country’s overseas development programs from our administration, Paul White’s SoftPower FulStories interview stands out as a portrait of a public servant who listened deeply, consistently, and across cultures. His mixed‑race upbringing gave him an early understanding of identity and belonging, and that sensitivity shaped his years with International Volunteer Service in Laos, where he formed a lasting appreciation for the Hmong and other highland communities whose loyalty and sacrifices were too often ignored in U.S. policy debates. Those formative experiences carried into a long, principled career with USAID, where White became known for elevating local knowledge, honoring community voices, and insisting that development work be rooted in dignity rather than geopolitics. His two-part conversation is a reminder that the most effective public servants are those who start by listening. Click here for Paul’s interview—and mine if you’re interested #40 – Paul E. White (Part 1)
What We’re Reading and Viewing and Why:

One of the joys of reviewing books is getting to know fellow writers, which is why I selected this book, as I admire both writers. Paul Theroux’s Sir Vidia’s Shadow is one of the most intimate, unsettling, and revealing portraits of a literary friendship. It is a study in mentorship, ambition, ego, and the corrosive effects of genius on human relationships. The book traces Theroux’s thirty‑one‑year relationship with V. S. Naipaul—beginning in a University in Kampala in the mid‑1960s, when Theroux was a young Peace Corps teacher, and Naipaul was already a rising star—and follows its evolution through admiration, dependence, rivalry, estrangement, and, finally, a surprising late‑life reconciliation.
The relationship begins in Uganda, where Theroux encounters Naipaul as a kind of literary rock star—brilliant, intimidating, and already the author of A House for Mr. Biswas, one of my favorite novels, which led some critics to call him “the greatest living English writer.” Naipaul, nicknamed Vidia, was knighted in 1990 and received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2001. For the young Theroux, Naipaul was not simply a model but a living embodiment of what a writer could be: disciplined, uncompromising, and fiercely intelligent. Early on, Theroux becomes Naipaul’s apprentice, absorbing the master’s lessons—about prose, about travel, about the writer’s life.
As the decades pass, the relationship becomes more complicated. Fame alters Naipaul, and success alters Theroux. Although Theroux claims that he didn’t write out of vengeance, “I haven’t turned on Naipaul.” He says. “This is about the complexities of friendship.” Click here for the entire review, Sir Vidia’s Shadow: A Friendship Across Five Continents by Paul Theroux, Reviewed by Mark D. Walker – Million Mile Walker

The Prime cable series House of the Spirit allows you to step into one of Isabel Allende’s most beloved and internationally celebrated works. Her novel has sold millions, inspired a major Hollywood film, and now finds new life on screen. What sets this story apart is its blend of spiritual realism—very much in the lineage of Gabriel García Márquez—woven through a family saga shaped by love, loss, and the violent upheaval of Pinochet’s takeover in Chile. A powerful reminder of how personal and political histories collide
Those We Wish Were Still With Us

Esther told this story in the birthday album, compiled in 1998 from messages sent by my friends from around the world. “Dear Mark, We’ve come a long way since that day in 1993 when you arrived at FH. And you have survived it well, despite inheriting a staff that includes Reba, Debbie, Kelly, and me. Now that had to be a real challenge! But we’re glad you didn’t give up — people are working together and accomplishing more than ever before. Your enthusiasm is contagious, so much so that this group is no longer known as the “Major dodo” Department! Esther
What Others Are Saying
Thanks, Mark, that was well done. I read somewhere that mentor relationships almost always end in one of two ways. The two eventually become equal collaborators, or it ends in a massive falling-out, usually because the older person couldn’t accept the mentee’s new status and independence: Ryan Murdock, author and podcaster of Personal Landscapes, about my review of Sir Vidia’s Shadow.
Hello Mark, Great to see your review of George Packer’s “Village in Waiting.” Peter Gubbels, fellow overseas staffer at World Neighbors and board member of Groundswell International.
You’re beyond kind, if there is such a thing. Thank you so much for your encouragement and your lovely words. I appreciate it more than you know. I hope to see you soon. Having fellow authors to encourage us is really part of the beauty of writing. ✍️ 👼Thank you again, Jody Sharpe on my review of New Angel In Town.
I also listened to your Soft/Powerful Stories again and watched the workshop (on the impact of book reviews and author scams, ( The Million Mile Walker: A Literary Journey with Mark D. Walker.) You had a lot of information. I took 3 pages of notes. I very much enjoyed the workshop. Thanks so much. Cindi Mosca, author, artist, and fellow Advisory Board Member of Peace Corps Worldwide
You can find my 85 book reviews and 28 articles, as well as several videos and photos, on my website, which also offers a reduced price for my new book if you read it and pass it along to your local library:
“Follow” me on Blue Sky—at (2) @millionmilewalker.bsky.social — Bluesky, Substack- Mark D Walker| Substack– and Facebook https://www.facebook.com/millionmilewalker/ for the latest international affairs and literature. And please share the sign-up page link with the Dispatch for any friends who might enjoy it. Million Mile Walker Newsletter – Million Mile Walker.
And, as always, if you’ve read Different Latitudes: My Life in the Peace Corps and Beyond, My Saddest Pleasures: 50 Years on the Road, the Best Travel Book according to the Peace Corps Writers, and, of course, my most recent book, The Guatemala Reader, please review and rate them on Amazon and Goodreads.
Shalom!
Mark D. Walker