The Maine Woods
English
By (author): Henry David Thoreau
- Redesigned edition featuring an insightful foreword by Thoreau scholar Richard Francis Fleck.
- Fleck is a well-respected authority on Thoreau and the author of many books including Henry Thoreau and John Muir Among the Indians.
- Henry David Thoreau (July 12, 1817 May 6, 1862) was an American author, poet, philosopher, abolitionist, naturalist, tax resister, development critic, surveyor, historian, and leading transcendentalist.
- This book was first published in 1864 (composed partly of articles he had written earlier for periodicals) and still in print, is an insightful reporters picture of a rugged wilderness the moment before being irrevocably altered by armies of loggers.
- Today the virgin forest seen by Thoreau is gone; trees have been cut, regrown, and harvested again. But modern travelers hikers, campers, hunters, fishers, canoeists or back road wanderers will still find, as Thoreau did, a land more grim and wild than you had anticipated. Its also pin-drop tranquil, teeming with wildlife and, in places, challenging to reach. (NYTimes)
- Following Thoreau into the Maine Woods is hardly a new idea, but it is becoming easier. The Thoreau-Wabanaki Trail was inaugurated, delineating and celebrating Thoreaus passage on routes that Penobscot Indians had used for thousands of years. (NYTimes)
- Nature tourism is a $37 billion annual industry in the United States (Outdoor Industry Association).