Description
John Burroughs is generally credited with having popularized the American nature essay as a literary genre. He journeyed to Yellowstone with President Theodore Roosevelt and hiked around the Grand Canyon and the Yosemite Valley with John Muir.
Collected here are natural history essays from the books that span Burroughs's most productive years, from 1871 to 1912. In these essays, Burroughs writes of the seasons, of his beloved Catskill Mountains, the Adirondacks, the Maine woods, and the far west of Yosemite and coastal Alaska. Burroughs set the tone for a literary tradition that continues today. As Richard F. Fleck notes in the introduction: "Surely all American nature writers owe some debt to John Burroughs who takes the reader along the trail and gives him the sight, sound, and scent of the deep woods."Author: John Burroughs
Publisher: Syracuse University Press
Published: 05/01/1998
Pages: 232
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.48lbs
Size: 7.53h x 5.05w x 0.53d
ISBN13: 9780815604167
ISBN10: 0815604165
BISAC Categories:
- Nature | General
- Literary Collections | Essays
About the Author
John Burroughs was the naturalist of the Catskills and friend and contemporary of John Muir.
Richard F. Fleck, dean of arts and humanities at the Community College of Denver, is the author of Where Land ls Mostly Sky: Essays on the American West.