“Walden. Yesterday I came here to live.” That entry from the
journal of Henry David Thoreau, and the intellectual journey it
began, would by themselves be enough to place Thoreau in the
American pantheon. His attempt to “live deliberately” in a
small woods at the edge of his hometown of Concord has been a
touchstone for individualists and seekers since the publication of
Walden in 1854. But there was much more to Thoreau than his brief
experiment in living at Walden Pond. A member of the vibrant
intellectual circle centered on his neighbor Ralph Waldo Emerson,
he was also an ardent naturalist, a manual laborer and inventor, a
radical political activist, and more. Many books have taken up
various aspects of Thoreau’s character and achievements, but, as
Laura Dassow Walls writes, “Thoreau has never been captured
between covers; he was too quixotic, mischievous, many-sided.”
Two hundred years after his birth, and two generations after the
last full-scale biography, Walls restores Henry David Thoreau to us
in all his profound, inspiring complexity. Walls traces the full
arc of Thoreau’s life, from his early days in the intellectual
hothouse of Concord, when the American experiment still felt fresh
and precarious, and “America was a family affair, earned by one
generation and about to pass to the next.” By the time he died in
1862, at only forty-four years of age, Thoreau had witnessed the
transformation of his world from a community of farmers and
artisans into a bustling, interconnected commercial nation. What
did that portend for the contemplative individual and abundant,
wild nature that Thoreau celebrated? Drawing on Thoreau’s copious
writings, published and unpublished, Walls presents a Thoreau
vigorously alive in all his quirks and contradictions: the young
man shattered by the sudden death of his brother; the ambitious
Harvard College student; the ecstatic visionary who closed Walden
with an account of the regenerative power of the Cosmos. We meet
the man whose belief in human freedom and the value of labor made
him an uncompromising abolitionist; the solitary walker who found
society in nature, but also found his own nature in the society of
which he was a deeply interwoven part. And, running through it all,
Thoreau the passionate naturalist, who, long before the age of
environmentalism, saw tragedy for future generations in the human
heedlessness around him. “The Thoreau I sought was not in any
book, so I wrote this one,” says Walls. The result is a Thoreau
unlike any seen since he walked the streets of Concord, a Thoreau
for our time and all time.
General
Imprint: |
University of Chicago Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
September 2018 |
Authors: |
Laura Dassow Walls
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 48mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
640 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-226-59937-3 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-226-59937-X |
Barcode: |
9780226599373 |
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