Step into the woods with a version of Walden that speaks directly to twenty-first-century readers. This refreshed edition keeps Henry David Thoreau's insights intact while offering clean, reader-friendly formatting, contemporary typography, and lightly clarified language that smooths out archaic phrasing without diluting meaning. Whether you're new to Thoreau or revisiting him after many years, this modernized text makes his reflections on solitude, simplicity, and purpose more accessible, engaging, and enjoyable than ever before.
First published in the mid-nineteenth century, Walden captures Thoreau's experiment in simple living beside Walden Pond during a rapidly industrializing era. His meditations on nature, time, work, and inner freedom feel startlingly relevant in an age of constant noise and distraction. This edition invites you to slow down, think deeply, and question what truly matters. Open these pages to reconnect with the natural world—and with yourself—through one of America's foundational works of mindfulness and self-reliance.
Henry David Thoreau (born David Henry Thoreau) was an American author, naturalist, transcendentalist, tax resister, development critic, philosopher, and abolitionist who is best known for Walden, a reflection upon simple living in natural surroundings, and his essay, Civil Disobedience, an argument for individual resistance to civil government in moral opposition to an unjust state.
Thoreau's books, articles, essays, journals, and poetry total over 20 volumes. Among his lasting contributions were his writings on natural history and philosophy, where he anticipated the methods and findings of ecology and environmental history, two sources of modern day environmentalism.
In 1817, Henry David Thoreau was born in Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard University in 1837, taught briefly, then turned to writing and lecturing. Becoming a Transcendentalist and good friend of Emerson, Thoreau lived the life of simplicity he advocated in his writings. His two-year experience in a hut in Walden, on land owned by Emerson, resulted in the classic, Walden: Life in the Woods (1854). During his sojourn there, Thoreau refused to pay a poll tax in protest of slavery and the Mexican war, for which he was jailed overnight. His activist convictions were expressed in the groundbreaking On the Duty of Civil Disobedience (1849). In a diary he noted his disapproval of attempts to convert the Algonquins "from their own superstitions to new ones." In a journal he noted dryly that it is appropriate for a church to be the ugliest building in a village, "because it is the one in which human nature stoops to the lowest and is the most disgraced." (Cited by James A. Haught in 2000 Years of Disbelief.) When Parker Pillsbury sought to talk about religion with Thoreau as he was dying from tuberculosis, Thoreau replied: "One world at a time."
Thoreau's philosophy of nonviolent resistance influenced the political thoughts and actions of such later figures as Leo Tolstoy, Mohandas K. Gandhi, and Martin Luther King, Jr. D. 1862.