From returning to Ethiopia to find it wasn't as her memory had left it, to the Australian Army and Bible school, and culminating in an 800-kilometre trek through the Camino, Alie Benge writes of searching and longing for a sense of place - whatever that may be. 'If home is love, can you have a home and yet be lonely? If you're lonely, are you in some way away from home?' These nineteen stories are a pilgrimage: a journey of escaping the cycle of displacement, the constant burden of choice, navigating relationships and love, and coming to terms with separation. Benge unravels the elusive idea of belonging in a deeply nomadic account of what it means to find your way home. 'Ithaca is a series of mediations on the big quests in our lives. Alie Benge's unquavering voice guides us through her discoveries with a singular and compelling perspective.' -Rose Lu, author of All Who Live on Islands 'Alie Benge's essays are jumper cables. In each essay another circuit closes, bringing a jolt of understanding - and heart-stopping, heart-starting wonder.' -Elizabeth Knox, author of The Absolute Book