Description
Book SynopsisThe ultimate gift edition of
Walden for bibliophiles, aficionados, and scholars
Trade Review“A handsome ‘all-things-Walden’ edition, copiously annotated by Jeffrey S. Cramer, curator of collections at the Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods.”—Michael Kenney,
Boston Sunday Globe“Cramer’s side notes are like short, illuminating conversations.”—Jacqueline Blais,
USA Today“Meticulous and often fascinating annotations. . . . It is the paradox of
Walden, and of all great literature that seeks to represent the real world, that by rooting his narrative so firmly in actualities of his own time and place, Thoreau created a work that remains vitally relevant to our own.”—Robert Finch,
Los Angeles TimesWinner of the 2004 National Outdoor Book Award in the Outdoor Classic category
Co-winner of the 2005 Julia Ware Howe Special Award sponsored by the Boston Authors Club
Received rating of “Outstanding” from 2005 University Press Books Committee, Association of American University Presses (AAUP)
Short listed for “Best of the Best of the University Presses: Books You Should Know About” by the Association of American University Presses
“Anyone who reads Thoreau in editions annotated by the great Jeffrey S. Cramer . . . will know everything there is to know about Thoreau and (amazingly) have a fun time learning it.”—Sarah Payne Stuart, author of
Perfectly Miserable: Guilt, God, and Real Estate in a Small Town“Cramer’s notes are immensely useful. His edition of Walden will be a boon to ordinary readers and scholars alike.”—Denis Donoghue, author of
Speaking of Beauty“Thoreau’s masterpiece—here freshly refurbished by Jeffrey S. Cramer—speaks to our material and spiritual condition as powerfully as on the day it first appeared. Now, more than ever,
Walden is our indispensable American book.”—Alan D. Hodder, professor of comparative religion, Hampshire College
“Jeffrey Cramer’s
Walden is the most accurate and readable text of Thoreau’s masterpiece. Cramer’s version now replaces all other available editions of
Walden as the most attractive and reliable way to approach this great American book.”—Joel Porte, author of
Consciousness and Culture: Emerson and Thoreau Reviewed