Selected Product: | Walden: Or, Life in the Woods (Dover Thrift) Paperback Edition: New edition Author: Henry David Thoreau Publisher: Dover Publications Inc. Release Date: August 1995 ISBN-10: 0486284956 ISBN-13: 9780486284958 List Price: £2.25 Average Customer Rating: | | Civil Disobedience (Thrift Editions) ISBN-10: 0486275639 Self Reliance (Dover Thrift) ISBN-10: 0486277909 Into the Wild ISBN-10: 033045367X Walking ISBN-10: 0978653688 White Fang and The Call of the Wild (Penguin Popular Classics) ISBN-10: 0140621148 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Walden: Or, Life in the Woods (Dover Thrift) by Henry David Thoreau (ISBN-10: 0486284956, ISBN-13: 9780486284958). At this time we have not yet written a review for Walden: Or, Life in the Woods (Dover Thrift) by Henry David Thoreau (ISBN-10: 0486284956, ISBN-13: 9780486284958). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Ray of Hope | Customer Rating: | In a topsy-turvy world where madness, greed, and evil are now the perceived normailty and "common sense", books like Walden are confirmation that it is better to be different to the majority.
Thoreau elaborately discusses the wisdom which some of us may at times have pondered on. Many future denizens of Hell, jealously target human beings who are earning more Heaven with each passing moment, and attack them to try and weaken their soul. But a well-read and discerning individual perseveres with ease, and remains authentic.
A wonderful example is where Thoreau speaks of the utter futility of those who profess to be charitable, but are in actual fact a part of the problem. Thoreau gives an analogy of a slave breeder, who donates the proceeds of every tenth slave, to buy a month of free Sundays for the first nine slaves he sold.
Walden is a rare combination of beauty and magic, shining light on todays hypocritical society, and helping genuine human beings who understand the true meaning of life, to evolve. | Truly a world classic. Great writing. A life-changing read. | Customer Rating: | | This is a book to be pondered, to be read slowly, a book worth the effort to read in order to understand what Thoreau is saying, and to see the application to him- or herself, now, today. As happens with great writing, the reader is changed by this book. Even in reading the first few pages, the reader has a profound experience. Multiply that by reading Walden in entirety and the reader emerges a different person. However, the reader must be willing to enter into Thoreau's world and his experience. Readers who find such writing tedious are, one suspects, too used to reading fast-paced novels. For those with an interest in history, philosophy, the human condition, truth in reality, and simply in having an educated mind, there is no greater work. Walden is truly a world classic. | Brilliant, Brilliant, Brilliant! | Customer Rating: | One of the best books I have ever studied. Hidden gems await inside for anyone who reads this classic. If literature can be seen as a medium to express our thoughts in the deepest yet most lucid ways, then Walden must be in the top quartile of the best of them.
And all of this for a couple of quid? Buy it! | Obsession with Beans | Customer Rating: | | As an addendum to the earlier reviews posted here I'd like to suggest that the obsession thoreau has with the price of beans is, like the cetology chapters in Moby Dick, or the compulsive list making of Robinson Crusoe, as much a device for creating a mood as a dry stocktaking exercise. Thoreau is demonstrating the ritualism of a solitary existence - if you lived alone in a hut in the woods, wouldn't you become obsessed with the fruits of your daily toil? It amounts to more than a hill of beans. | A Jewel | Customer Rating: | | I find it hard to believe that the above reviewers are talking about the same book. This book is one of my personal treasures. Thoreau seems to embody the intelligence and wit of a great thinker with a childlike enthusiasm and excitement about the beauty of the natural world. When you combine that with his desire to live life and his respect for even the most humble of his fellow men you are in for some profound literature. This is not a book to be scan read or rushed through. Savour it, I don't see how you could be disappointed. |
|