

Thoreau paints the woods and waterways of Maine with the same loving hand that described his Walden home, and entertains with the successes and difficulties of the trip and the quirks of his companion and their guide, Joseph Polis, told with a wit and insight that can only be found in Thoreau. Book Synopsis Thoreaus famous trip through the Maine Woods reissued to entertain, encourage, and inspire contemporary naturalists. Paperback (September 10th, 2017): $7.About the Book Thoreaus famous trip through the Maine Woods reissued to entertain, encourage, and inspire contemporary naturalists.Ecosystems & Habitats - Lakes, Ponds & Swamps.There is never any doubt about his genuineness, or that what he states is free from bias and romantic exaggeration. The play of his imagination is keen and nimble, yet his fancy is so well balanced by his native common sense that it does not run away with him. He was a careful and accurate observer, more at home in the fields and woods than in village and town, and with a gift of piquant originality in recording his impressions. Thoreau was one of the world's greatest nature writers, and as the years pass, his fame steadily increases. His home was in an Indian village on an island in the Penobscot River at Oldtown, a few miles above Bangor. The Indian retained many of his aboriginal instincts and ways, though his tribe was in most respects civilized. He liked especially the companionship of men who were in close contact with nature, and in this book we find him deeply interested in his Indian guide and lingering fondly over the man's characteristics and casual remarks. For though he was a person of culture and refinement, with a college education, and had for an intimate friend so rare a man as Ralph Waldo Emerson, he was half wild in many of his tastes and impatient of the restraints and artificiality of the ordinary social life of the towns and cities.

No one could have been better fitted than Thoreau to enjoy such a region and to transmit his enjoyment of it to others. Here was a vast tract of almost virgin woodland, peopled only with a few loggers and pioneer farmers, Indians, and wild animals. The chief attraction that inspired Thoreau to make this canoe trip was the primitiveness of the region.
