What a great insight into Thoreau. Reading Thoreau's works over the course of my life (and gaining inspiration and very much pleasure and satisfaction from them), I have always felt if not actually sensed that much of his writing was filled with humor and irony, call it farce if you will. It seemed to me that he was cajoling his readers to look about and find the insights to many questions of their lives and world. It also seemed to me that Thoreau was not what we would classify today as a "greenie". He was something more practical. I felt that he was trying to make sense of how man and nature worked together rather than worshipping nature as an end in itself.
Well, Mr. Sullivan does a wonderful job of putting these thoughts of mine into words. He also manages to bring Thoreau to life in Thoreau's actual time, giving us insight into the world he actually lived and how his writings really came across then. We see Thoreau the young man searching for his place in the world, seeking adventure, travel, friendship, love, fun and frivolity, trying to make a living and struggling with just how best to do that. We find that Thoreau was a bit of an engineer, a bit of a mechanic, a bit of a woodsman, a professional surveyor, a city dweller, a pencil maker, s free lance writer, a fisherman, a collector, serious abolitionist, somewhat of a botanist and zooligist! A very interesting, passionate man living his life with gusto.
I came away with the understanding that Thoreau was in fact not so much a conservationist as a realist. Trying to find how man and nature fit together in our world. Understanding what was going on in his time is the key to understanding Thoreau and his writings and in my opinion, make his works that much more valuable and insightful. Mr. Sullivan shows us the way.
After reading this book, I like and appreciate Thoreau more as a real, living person than I ever did. This was a great read.
The "Notes" chapter of the book give much in the way of information for further reading and insight into Thoreau the man.
My only complaint comes in the last chapter of the book in which the author makes a pilgrimage to Walden. I found this part of the book to be clunky and frankly kind of meaningless. Mr. Sullivan seems to be reverting to Thoreau as the greenpeace member or patron saint of "the movement" after spending the whole book refuting that image. Mr. Sullivan spends too much time wondering about Thoreau's feelings on genetically engineered crops, blogging, sustainable seafood, yadda, yadda. He also drops the global warming supporter hints along the way just for good measure, mentioning how Thoreau's "zeal for rote recording of plant flowerings or water levels..is proof, in the short term, of the drastic effecs of global warming." Well, I don't know about that leap, but there it is.
All in all, a book well worthy of spending time with. Afterward, re-read a bit of Thoreau (as I did) and see if you don't seem to have a better appreciation and understanding - and just maybe, more fun!