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Henry David Thoreau is an American intellectual icon; what made him so was the decade between his graduation from Harvard and the years he spent in a cabin he built himself on Ralph Waldo Emerson's land at Walden Pond--the formative decade that turned him into one of America's most influential writers.
In a detailed and textured narrative, Sims brings Thoreau to life--striding across the page like a radical folksinger rather than the curmudgeonly recluse who occupies our mental image of Walden Pond. In this youthful period, he wrote his first book and refined the journal entries that formed the core of his later work, Walden; joined the anti-slavery campaign and studied Native American culture; spent the night in jail that led to his celebrated essay Civil Disobedience, which would inspire the likes of Gandhi and Martin Luther King; developed a scientific/poetic response to nature; and aligned himself with the Transcendentalism , which questioned assumptions about God, citizenship, and the Industrial Revolution.
Sims relates intimate moments in Thoreau's daily life--teaching Nathaniel Hawthorne to row a boat; tutoring Emerson's nephew on Staten Island--and the deep influence of his parents and his beloved older brother, John, whose tragic early death haunted him. Chronicling Thoreau's youthful transformation, Sims shows how his intellectual development would resonate for the rest of his life, and throughout American literature and history.
Published | 27 Aug 2015 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 384 |
ISBN | 9781620401972 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Dimensions | 210 x 140 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
This appealing story succeeds beautifully in accomplishing Sims's goal to “find Henry” rather than “applaud Thoreau.” ... With attentive research that elaborates but never intrudes, Sims invites twenty-first century readers to discover their own Thoreau among his various identities
Sandra Harbert Petrulionis, author of To Set This World Right
The closest you are ever going to get to going on a walk with Thoreau in his natural habitat ... A beautifully evocative book ... A splendid piece of research and a superb introduction to the young writer, thinker and insurrectionary
Rebecca Solnit, author of Wanderlust: A History of Walking and A Field Guide to Getting Lost
Building his chapters with deliberate, sometimes-tertiary detail, Sims creates a sensuous natural environment in which to appreciate his subject
Kirkus
[A] surpassingly vivid and vital chronicle of Thoreau's formative years
Booklist
The author is brilliant at evoking the life and seasons of 19th-century Concord … To discover the local world and wilderness in which Thoreau lived, this biography is an excellent place to start
Country Life
How Henry became thoroughly Thoreau is the theme of this lively biography
The Times
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