Noé Álvarez is a writer, a runner, and the son of Mexican immigrant parents descended from the indigenous Purépecha people. Raised in Yakima, Washington, he is the first-time author of thus memoir. As a disillusioned, nineteen-year-old first-generation college student, he left school, seeking deeper meaning and fellowship, to run with other Native Americans in a grueling relay run called the Peace and Dignity Journeys (PDJ). During months of running across America, anywhere from 10-30 miles a day, he learned to connect with himself, with the land and with Indigenous communities from Canada to Guatemala. His own memories are intertwined with the stories and struggles of his parents and the other PDJ runners, seeking healing from their painful pasts.