🔖 "Stories change us. Liz Jansen's story is both an adventure and a mesmerizing process of excavating the meaning, messages, and magic embedded in our everyday lives. Her journey is an invitation to be awake to the story of our lives and the lives of our ancestors is telling. And that kind of story heals the heart." Oriah Mountain Dreamer, author of The InvitationLiz Jansen brings a rich vitality to several generations of ordinary people who become extraordinary through her painstaking research and beautiful writing. The Ancestor Trail is a journey with a difference: part road trip, part spiritual exploration, and part self-discovery, it answers questions that lie within all of us. I'm so glad she was able to overcome its many challenges to close the circle and tell this story." Mark Richardson, author of Zen and Now, editor of Canada Moto Guide"This today's version of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance if the book had been written by a sixty-year-old woman with a bladder infection who had a great knack for crashing. Liz Jansen isn't your typical rider, nor is this your typical self-help book. Jansen will do whatever it takes to heal herself, and the result is compelling, startling, and fun." Alexandra Shimo, author of Invisible North"Warning! Crash Landing is an emotional tour-de-force that may drive you to explore your own Ancestral Trail. BYO vehicle, baggage, and spirit guides! Jansen's meticulously-researched historical account of her Mennonite grandparents' exodus from Bolshevik Russia to the farmlands of Canada is a captivating journey through history and its effect on generations to come. Crash Landing demonstrates the power, drive, and generosity of the traveler and those she encounters to pass through any obstacles on a healing journey." Carla King, author of American Borders"In a time when many seek adventure in unfamiliar corners of the world, Jansen proves "coming home" is more than just a destination—it's about unveiling the ancestral influences that echo through time and highlight the generational and personal crossroads that lead to who we are today. You'll relate to every mile of Liz's journey." Susan Johnson, Horizons UnlimitedA beautifully written memoir about how life’s unexpected and potentially devastating detours lead to new roads, connections, and learning to follow the signs pointing home.As Liz Jansen approached her sixtieth birthday, she was driven to understand how the experiences of her German Mennonite ancestors, who’d arrived in Canada as Russian refugees almost a century earlier, had shaped her. Seeking answers, she got on her motorcycle and set off across the country on what she dubbed the Ancestor Trail—the places they’d lived as they established themselves in a new land. Three weeks into what she’d expected to be twelve to eight...