Walking the Bypass

Notes on Place From the Side of the Road

Ken Wilson author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Regina Press

Published:14th Oct '25

£17.99

Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.

Walking the Bypass cover

Reflections from the lone traveller for whom a highway was never the intended destination

Walking the Bypass recounts Ken Wilson’s singular experience of walking alongside the decidedly pedestrian-unfriendly Regina Bypass, all while situating the highway within the ongoing history of settler colonialism in southern Saskatchewan.
 
Through a series of ambitious and unconventional walks, Wilson sets out to understand the arrival and significance of the new (and politically contentious) highway encircling Saskatchewan’s capital as well as the Global Transportation Hub, a sprawling warehouse park the Bypass was intended to serve. He offers a new perspective on these heavily travelled yet untrodden spaces in a region dominated by industrial agriculture and high-speed transportation. Reflecting on the profound transformations to the land since the arrival of settlers in the 1880s, he wonders whether it’s possible to form a connection with the land through walking—even on the gravelly edge of the freeway.
 
In vivid and sincere prose that captures the thoughts of a man trudging along the roadside, Walking the Bypass explores how walking can transform non-places into places and enable settlers to forge a relationship with the land around them.

“What is Canada, if not a shady land deal? The travelogue portion of Walking the Bypass is sutured to a history of the Crown’s abuses of Indigenous peoples…[Wilson’s] guilt is the most affecting, visceral aspect of the book, and it kept me turning the pages…I see why he wants to make amends, find kinship with the land. But, in the Enshittocene, trading utility for futility is a form of resistance.”

-- Dan Piepenbring

"[Walking the Bypass is] a book that uses the regional to unfold and to grapple with some of the most vital challenges of our time."


Walking the Bypass reminds settlers of the need to remember intergenerational responsibility, atonement, and decolonization—words that might describe a path forward. Let us stay the course.”

-- Louise Halfe-Sky Dancer, author of Burning in this Midnight Dream

“Original, unsettling, and provocative.”

-- Candace Savage, author of A Geography of Blood

“This book is an eyes-wide-open trek through a landscape almost entirely subsumed by the extractive forces of late-stage colonialism, but there is a much more beautiful pathway here, too—one worn by the steps of the author and other settlers looking for ways to walk side-by-side with Indigenous Peoples who are calling for land justice and an end to the racist and systemic inequality that remains Canada’s festering wound.”

-- Trevor Herriot, author of Grass, Sky, and Song: Promise and Peril in the World of Grassland Birds

"Seeking 'the sacred in the stubble,' Ken Wilson parses the movement of place to non-place and back again by walking the route of the Regina Bypass. To map the beginnings of connecting where you are with how you got there, read this book about roads, ecologically sensitive areas, and the ruderal on the desire path to decolonial thought with Wilson as your companion, one (sometimes blistered) step at a time."

-- Tanis MacDonald, author of Straggle: Adventures in Walking While Fe

ISBN: 9781779400765

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 355g

370 pages