The timeless novel that chronicles a reckless romance in the
wilderness, from Edward Abbey, one of America's foremost defenders of
the natural environment.
Black Sun is a bittersweet love story involving an iconoclastic forest
ranger and a freckle-faced "American princess" half his age. Like Lady
Chatterley's lover, he initiates her into the rites of sex and the
stark, secret harmonies of his wilderness kingdom. She, in turn, awakens
in him the pleasure of love. Then she mysteriously disappears, plunging
him into desolation.
Black Sun is a singular novel in Abbey's repertoire, a romantic story
of a solitary man's passion for the outdoors and for a woman who is his
wilderness muse.
"Like most honest novels, Black Sun is partly autobiographical, mostly
invention, and entirely true. The voice that speaks in this book is the
passionate voice of the forest," Abbey writes, "the madness of desire,
and the joy of love, and the anguish of final loss."