At Texas Monthly, Jeffrey McWhorter shares a different sort of city itinerary: a photo essay documenting a walk across Dallas, from its southernmost border to its northernmost tip. “I’ve always been determined to scrape back the city’s metropolitan veneer and find adventure right here in the in-between spaces of my beloved hometown,” he writes. McWhorter walked 52 miles over two days, and met 231 people. His photographs paint a vibrant portrait of the city, and reveal the connections with strangers—neighbors, really—that he made along the way.

Nowadays I’m mostly content with my ordinary family life—carpool, Home Depot runs, Saturday morning soccer, Sunday morning church—all neatly organized in a carefully Tetris’d schedule. But from time to time the itch returns, and I find myself staring at the Google Maps satellite view of Dallas, zooming in on curiosities and daydreaming about what might be next.

Picks about walking

On Walking

Ira Sukrungruang | The Sun | December 2025 | 3,018 words

“To love walking is to love the body, and this has been a barrier for me.”

During a Pandemic, Walk

David Jenkins | High Country News | April 17, 2023 | 1,343 words

“I prefer to travel on foot, close to dirt, vaulted by sky, my rhythm the rhythm of human evolution.”

Cheri has been an editor at Longreads since 2014.