About
Beth Jusino is an award-winning writer, developmental editor, teacher, and publishing consultant with almost twenty years of experience helping individuals share better stories.
Beth is the author of Walking to the End of the World (Mountaineers Books, 2018), a travel memoir about hiking a thousand miles on a 900-year-old pilgrimage trail that won the Barbara Savage "Miles From Nowhere" Award. Her independently-published book The Author’s Guide to Marketing: Make a Plan That Attracts More Readers and Sells More Books (You Might Even Enjoy It) won a bronze medal in the 2015 Independent Publishers Book Awards.
Beth is also an active ghostwriter, collaborator, and collaborative editor for story compilations, memoirs, parenting guides, and business books. She's partnered with writers published by Simon & Schuster, Baker Books, Bethany Publishers, Nortia Press, and more.
Beth is a member of The Author's Guild and the Northwest Editors Guild and teaches the crafts of writing and marketing at dozens of conferences and gatherings each year. For six years, she led a full-day “Guide to Getting Published” seminar for writers at the University of Washington’s Experimental College, and now regularly teaches writing and publishing classes at libraries across the Pacific Northwest.
Beth grew up near the New Jersey shore and earned her BA in political science. She lives in Seattle.
Featured Work
Walking to the End of the World: A Thousand Miles on the Camino de Santiago
Beth Jusino is a person more at home with a book than a backpack. Despite that, in April 2015, walked out of a French cathedral in the historic village of Le Puy, down a cobblestone street, and turned west. Seventy-nine days, one thousand miles, two countries, two mountain ranges, and three pair of destroyed shoes later, she and her husband Eric reached the Atlantic Ocean. To get there, they followed the 900-year-old Way of Saint James, commonly known as the Camino de Santiago.
This was not really a journey of hardship – they showered every day, slept in real beds every night, and enjoyed plenty of French cheese and Spanish Rioja along the way. They also spent 14 hours a day outside, away from all electronic devices, hiking and talking with people from around the world. Walking Together to the End of the World is their "warm-hearted and engaging" story of an adventure lived at a more human pace, written as a travelogue and personal guide for those who are also in search of their own accessible adventure.