Book Review: Living at Full Throttle; Embracing Empowerment, Healing, and the Open Road, by Kathleen Terner

Facing the fear of dying head-on

By Sarah Schilke
Kathleen Terner Living Life at Full Throttle
Living at Full Throttle; Embracing Empowerment, Healing, and the Open Road, by Kathleen Terner, isn’t just about the spectacularly challenging roads the author rides, it is about her inner journey of resilience, healing, and reconnection with family and herself. The 236-page paperback is available for $21.99 or in eBook format for $9.99 from KathleenTerner.com and other outlets.

Meeting Kathleen Terner

There are plenty of authors publishing books about their motorcycling adventures. Many are reviewed here, and it’s always fun to tag along on journeys you might not be able to take yourself. I recently had the pleasure of meeting WomenRidersNow.com (WRN) contributor and author Kathleen Terner at the Women’s International Motorcycle Association (WIMA) USA national rally and hearing her speak. It wasn’t just another spoken travelogue, rather, this tiny, sweet, unassuming woman astounded me.

Michelle Lamphere WIMA President
WIMA USA President, Michelle Lamphere, holds up Kathleen Terner’s latest book after purchasing it at the national rally in Oregon City, Oregon.

Terner is a fearless adventurer and advocate for resilience and empowerment. Known for her numerous daring motorcycle journeys across some of the world’s most challenging terrain, she has also confronted many personal challenges head on.

Kathleen Terner Living Life at Full Throttle
It wouldn’t be a stretch to say Terner is one of the most petite women I’ve ever met. A humble school teacher and loving Christian, weighing all of 110 pounds at just 5-foot-1-inch, she is also surprisingly one of the toughest people I know.
Kathleen Terner books
Terner continues her inspiring story in Living at Full Throttle, the follow-up to her first book, Two Wheeled Therapy, which she wrote after WRN published her story here.

Living At Full Throttle

Overcoming life-altering setbacks—surviving throat cancer, then a brain cancer diagnosis and a divorce—she turns to motorcycling as a path to self-discovery and healing. Living at Full Throttle starts out with a determined Terner embarking on a harrowing ride up the infamously dangerous Dalton Highway in Alaska following a positive prognosis about her brain cancer.

dirty bike
Riding along Alaska’s shoulderless mucky Dalton Highway to Prudhoe Bay and back, Terner confronts danger she’s never known and fear of imminent death. Just like every other challenge, she faces it head-on, fueling herself with determination and spiritualism.

Terner braves over 400 miles of treacherous terrain, including steep inclines, mudslides, and unpredictable weather conditions that could ground even the most experienced riders. The Dalton, known as one of the most dangerous highways in the world, isn’t just a test of skill but also of mental fortitude. But that’s what she’s there for. This ride is about more than the road—it’s about confronting her deepest fear: the fear of dying.

Terner Prudhoe
Terner celebrates victory in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, with her rented Kawasaki Versys X-300 fitted with street-legal tires. She managed to make it up the Dalton Highway in spite of deep rutted muck, barreling semis, and nowhere to safely pull off to check or refill fuel. I don’t know why the bike looks so clean, but I am sure that’s one of the most satisfying smiles in her lifetime.
terner jumping for joy
Terner jumps for joy at her arrival in Prudhoe Bay just before “celebrating” with a plunge into freezing Arctic waters with a few (male) riders she met along the way. She has successfully survived the first half of a ride so dangerous most of us would either opt out or be talked out.

Passing through Coldfoot Camp, the almost midpoint between Prudhoe Bay and Fairbanks, on the way back down, Terner reflects on the journey knowing the worst is behind her. 

“Although I would prepare differently if I were to travel the Dalton again, I was grateful that I had persevered, overcome all odds, and succeeded in reaching the northernmost tip of the United States…” she writes. “As I continued south, I understood that I would be doing it as a different woman than the one who had left for Alaska less than two weeks earlier.” 

At the end of the trip she realizes she is no longer the woman who’s afraid to ride her Harley-Davidson up her own driveway, or of living alone. She reflects on the name bestowed upon her by other Dalton Highway travelers she had befriended, “I was Kathleen the Brave!”

The Adventure Continues

Seydisfjorder, Iceland
After the riveting account of her Dalton Highway experience, the narrative shifts to her continuing brain cancer diagnoses and her trips to Iceland, Europe, Russia and beyond. Here the adventure continues as she reaches Seydisfjorder, Iceland, a gateway town of 668 residents.

In Iceland, Terner sets her sights on the rugged “F-roads,” rough, unpaved gravel roads that lead to the Icelandic Highlands. She navigates  through lava fields, glacial rivers, and volcanic mountains. From the dramatic black-sand beaches of Vik to the majestic, snow-capped peaks of the Westfjords, Terner brings Iceland’s rugged beauty to life. She depicts the untamed allure of riding through some of the world’s most remote and challenging landscapes. 

With frigid winds and unpredictable weather, these conditions might not appeal to me—or to many riders. Yet, this is Kathleen Terner’s way of Living at Full Throttle. Meeting extraordinary challenges head-on and persevering through them. 

The book concludes with Terner embarking on a long-awaited tour through Europe, riding across the historic and scenic landscapes of France, Italy, Switzerland, and beyond. A bucket-list ride for many of us, she shares the joys of riding along the serpentine roads of the Alps, the scenic Amalfi coast, and the rolling countryside of Provence. Each location becomes a chapter in her journey, where the thrill of winding mountain passes and charming village stops intertwine with moments of self-discovery and gratitude for life.

Inspired Yet?

Kathleen Terner Harley-Davidson
“It’s not about outrunning fear,” Terner reflects, “but about riding with it and letting it teach you something about yourself.”

For anyone who feels inspired by adventure, resilience, and the courage to confront life’s unexpected turns, Living at Full Throttle is a compelling read. Terner’s story is a reminder that even in life’s darkest moments, there’s a way forward—an open road that beckons, with promise, beauty, and endless possibility.

The Living at Full Throttle; Embracing Empowerment, Healing, and the Open Road paperback is available for $21.99 or in eBook format for $9.99 from KathleenTerner.com, Amazon, and other retailers.

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