Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver, Reviewed by Mark D. Walker

The Poisonwood Bible is one of my favorite books, as someone who has worked with missionaries and worked in Africa. But when I heard that Charles Dickens inspired her latest book, I knew I had to read it. Not a Christmas goes by that I don’t insist that my children and grandkids watch several versions of “The Christmas Carol”. And I’d read J.D. Vance’s Hillbilly Elegy not that long ago—so this made for a literary trifecta. Dickens’ work helped Kingsolver overcome a bad case of writer’s block. She wanted to talk about orphans of an epidemic who became throwaway kids […]

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My Latest Journey to Guatemala with a Granddaughter, The Million Mile Walker Dispatch, August 2025

Dear friends and fellow travelers from around the world, Anna, Mark and our tour guide, Juan One of the highlights of my recent trek to Guatemala with my twenty-one-year-old granddaughter Anna was birdwatching for some of the 700 bird species at the Finca San Cayetano, at the foot of the Volcanoes of Fuego and Acatenango. We saw the colorful, green parrots as well as exotic birds with strange, long tails (our altitude was too low to see the elusive quetzal). Volcanoes El Fuego and Acatenango By far, the most exciting part of the trip was the 5.7 earthquake that occurred […]

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Guatemala: Lineage and Racism by Maria Elena Casaús Arzú, Reviewed by Mark D. Walker

As a long-time student and writer on Guatemala, I’ve often pondered the country’s inequality and the extreme power of its elite. Although written over thirty years ago, Guatemala: Lineage and Racism goes a long way in explaining it. The author brings a unique perspective to this meticulous study as she is a descendant of one of those elite families. She traces the phenomenon from colonial conquest to contemporary neoliberalism. And her genealogical approach—tracing the intermarriages, business alliances, and ideological continuities among elite families—offers a blueprint for understanding how power reproduces itself across generations. The author identifies twenty-two oligarchic families who […]

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The Passionate Sister: A Son’s Novel by John Thorndike, Reviewed by Mark D. Walker for the Great Writers Magazine

  John Thorndike confronts grief by reimagining his mother’s life beyond her premature death from addiction at 57. His compassionate narrative explores realms between memory and imagination, crafting an emotional testimony to maternal love and passion that transcends tragedy. He celebrates the resilience of the human spirit and the transformative power of second chances. Thorndike, a fellow Returned Peace Corps Volunteer, channels the emotional weight of personal loss into a fictionalized reimagining of his mother Ginny’s life—one that transcends the limitations of biography and ventures into the liberating terrain of possibility. The result is a deeply moving, restrained, and emotionally […]

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James by Percival Everett, Reviewed by Mark D. Walker

  Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) and Percival Everett’s James (2024) are separated by a century and a half. Yet, both confront the legacy of American racism through the lens of a fugitive slave named Jim. Twain’s novel, which is one of the most popular books in American literature, is simultaneously revered and reviled for its use of racial slurs and portrayal of antebellum attitudes. Everett’s version reimagines the same narrative from Jim’s perspective. Twain’s Huckleberry Finn is a satirical indictment of Southern society’s racism, focusing on Huck’s moral awakening and his decision not to expose Jim. […]

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My Latest Journey to Guatemala: With a Granddaughter! And a New Chapter for the Million Mile Walker Dispatch, July edition 2025

Dear friends and fellow travelers from around the world, Anna, Mark and our tour guide, Juan One of the highlights of my recent trek to Guatemala with my twenty-one-year-old granddaughter Anna was birdwatching for some of the 700 bird species at the Finca San Cayetano, at the foot of the Volcanoes of Fuego and Acatenango. We saw the colorful, green parrots as well as exotic birds with strange, long tails (our altitude was too low to see the elusive quetzal).    Volcanoes El Fuego and Acatenango By far, the most exciting part of the trip was the 5.7 earthquake that […]

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Guatemala Bound: With A Granddaughter! Million Mile Walker Dispatch, June 2025

Friends and Colleagues from Around the World, Today, I’ll roll out the plans for our next trip to Guatemala. The No Kings events will be the focus of Culture Watch. Then, it’s ‘What We’re Reading and Why,’ a new Scanning Project segment, ‘What Others Are Saying,’ plus an updated Calendar.   We’re going to Guatemala with our 20-year-old granddaughter, Ali, as part of our master plan to introduce our grandkids to other languages and cultures, as well as the birthplace of their parents and grandmother. On our last trip, I heard complaints that we were seeing too many things and […]

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A Dry Hate: Power Versus The People by Nancy Hicks Marshall, Reviewed by Mark D. Walker June 2025

I met the author at a conference of Arizona Professional Writers, and over lunch, we recognized our common interest in immigration politics—my focus was on Guatemala, and hers was on Arizona. Although her book is fiction, it’s based on the events surrounding “America’s Toughest Sheriff,” who served as Sheriff of Maricopa County from 1993 to 2016. I met Sheriff Arpaio at a wedding where I was the best man, and he seemed like a jovial, personable guy. He gained national attention on a segment on 60 Minutes, which highlighted Tent City, Pink Underwear, and illegal immigration sweeps and traffic stops […]

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The Demise of Soft Power and Harsh Times, Million Mile Walker Dispatch, May 2025

  Friends and Colleagues from Around the World, I’ll focus on the impact of dismantling overseas development programs in Culture Watch. Then it’s What We’re Reading and Why, a new Scanning Project segment, What Others Are Saying, plus an updated Calendar.       Culture Watch  Many Americans are unaware what USAID does and few realize the impact of its dismantling.  Humanitarian programs like USAID and the Peace Corps comprise our “Soft Power” which impacts how we are perceived abroad. The number of lives lost by its disappearance. Brooke Nicols, a Professor of Global Health at Boston University, developed an impact […]

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Reader Views Book Review of The Guatemala Reader, October, 2024

Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness… Charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime. This quote by Mark Twain, from The Innocents Abroad, well sums up “The Guatemala Reader: Extraordinary Lives and Amazing Stories.” Mark D. Walker’s compelling collection of essays shines a light on a country many of us in the Western world know little about. Through these essays, Guatemala emerges as a complex nation shaped by diverse ethnicities and a painful history of exploitation. Yet within these realities a vital and intelligent people […]

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