I Begin with Spring weaves natural history around Thoreau's life and
times in a richly illustrated field notebook format that can be opened
anywhere and invites browsing on every page. Beginning each season with
quotes from Thoreau's schoolboy essay about the changing seasons, Early
Bloomer follows him through the fields and woods of Concord, the joys
and challenges of growing up, his experiment with simple living on
Walden Pond, and his participation in the abolition movement,
self-reliance, science, and literature.
The book's two organizing themes--the chronology of Thoreau's life and
the seasonal cycle beginning with spring--interact seamlessly on every
spread, suggesting the correspondence of human seasons with nature's.
Thoreau's annual records of blooms, bird migrations, and other natural
events scroll in a timeline across the page bottoms, and the backmatter
includes a summary of how those dates have changed from his day to ours
and what that tells us about the science of phenology and climate
change.
Megan Baratta's watercolors are augmented with historical images and
reproductions of Thoreau's own sketches to create a high-interest visual
experience. The book includes a foreword from Thoreau scholar Jeffrey
Cramer, Curator of Collections for the Walden Woods Project.