What do you think?
Rate this book


191 pages, Paperback
First published August 1, 1923
It is a gem of a book. Or a bit of perfect paste. and myself, I like a bit of perfect paste in a perfect setting, so long as I am not fooled by pretence of reality. And the setting of Deerslayer could not be more exquisite. Lake Champlain again.As to Nathaniel Hawthorne, he concludes:
It is a marvellous allegory. It is to me one of the greatest allegories in all literature, The Scarlet Letter. Its marvellous under-meaning! And its perfect duplicity.Of Melville, and Moby-Dick; or, The Whale:
The absolute duplicity of that blue-eyed Wunderkind of Nathaniel. The American wonder-child, with his magical allegorical insight.
But he was a deep, great artist, even if he was rather a sententious man. He was a real American in that he always felt his audience in front of him. But when he ceases to be American, when he forgets all audience, and gives us his sheer apprehension of the world, then he is wonderful, his book commands a stillness in the soul, an awe.Lawrence made me see how much I miss when I read. I don't just skim the surface, but I don't look behind the obvious either. Perhaps the books I like least are those where the only good parts are not so obvious. I feel lucky to have stumbled across this, and it wasn't on my usual radar. Whether I see more (and understand more) of what I read remains to be seen. In any case, it can't hurt to know there is something behind the curtain should I choose to look.