Pas de couverture

Henry David Thoreau, Terry Tempest Williams, Michael McCurdy, Lloyd James: Walden (2010, Shambhala Publications, Incorporated)

240 pages

Langue : English

Publié 5 janvier 2010 par Shambhala Publications, Incorporated.

Voir sur OpenLibrary

(1 critique)

Henry Thoreau's "Walden" is a book about escaping from civilization in order to embrace your spiritual life

51 éditions

a publié une critique de Walden par Henry David Thoreau

Review of 'Walden' on 'Import'

In Thoreau's most famous book, he creates a space to view the world by moving away from what is accepted as society. For three years he lived in a cabin in Walden, and stripped his life back to essentials, learning to love the world he inhabited.



He shows with a flair for poetry and vocabulary how the local and global can be mingled together, nearly a hundred years before the word 'globalisation' was first used. His interest in philosophical reading stretches across the world, while his interest in experience of the world is limited to a small area. His wry humour and versatile use of the English language makes this not only an enjoyable philosophical text, but also a very enjoyable book overall.

Sujets

  • Thoreau, henry david, 1817-1862
  • Wilderness areas
  • Natural history, united states
  • Solitude
  • Massachusetts, social life and customs
  • Authors, biography