Hero to environmentalists and ecologists, and a profound thinker on
humanity's happiness, Henry David Thoreau was one of the strongest
shapers of the American character in the 19th century. This 1849 book,
written while Thoreau was living at Walden Pond, is ostensibly a travel
book, written to commemorate an 1839 river journey he took with his
brother, John, from Massachusetts to New Hampshire. But the trip is only
the framework upon which Thoreau hangs some of his most provocative
thoughts on poetry, history, religion, dreams, and the passing of a
slower way of life with the advent of the Industrial Revolution, the
evidence of which he witnessed from the rivers. While not Thoreau's
best-known work, *A Week* may be his most important, a beautifully
determined attempt to understand the past and reconcile it with the
future that continues to move readers today. Writer and philosopher
HENRY DAVID THOREAU (1817-1862) was born in Concord, Massachusetts, and
educated at Harvard University. His writings on human nature,
materialism, and the natural world rank him among the most influential
thinkers of American literature.