Henry D. Thoreau traveled to the backwoods of Maine in 1846, 1853, and
1857. Originally published in 1864, and published now with a new
introduction by Paul Theroux, this volume is a powerful telling of those
journeys through a rugged and largely unspoiled land. It presents
Thoreau's fullest account of the wilderness.
The Maine Woods is classic Thoreau: a personal story of exterior and
interior discoveries in a natural setting--all conveyed in taut,
masterly prose. Thoreau's evocative renderings of the life of the
primitive forest--its mountains, waterways, fauna, flora, and
inhabitants--are timeless and valuable on their own. But his impassioned
protest against the despoilment of nature in the name of commerce and
sport, which even by the 1850s threatened to deprive Americans of the
"tonic of wildness," makes The Maine Woods an especially vital book
for our own time.