Fenton Johnson's lyrical prose and searching sensibility explore what it
means to choose solitude and to celebrate the notion that solitude is a
legitimate and dignified calling. He delves into the lives and works of
nearly a dozen iconic solitaries he considers his kindred spirits, from
Thoreau at Walden Pond and Emily Dickenson in Amherst, to the fiercely
self-protective Zora Neale Hurston. The bright wakes these figures have
left behind illuminate Fenton Johnson's journey from his childhood in
rural Kentucky to his solitary travels in America, France, and India.
Woven into his musings about better-known solitaries are stories of
friends and family he has lost and found along the way."