Birch Browsings: A John Burroughs Reader (Nature Library, Penguin) - Softcover

9780140170160: Birch Browsings: A John Burroughs Reader (Nature Library, Penguin)
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Pete Flowers is facing forty. A shrewdly successful entrepreneur, a long-distance runner who can still turn heads, Pete leads a comfortable, private life. His last relationship, with a witty and impetuous man, ended a couple of years ago, but they continue to see each other as friends - linked by a strong sense of family. Pete's fear of intimacy, combined with the long shadow of AIDS, has kept him cautious, frustrated, and alone.
When Pete's mother, the lively and strong-willed matriarch of a well-to-do Philadelphia clan, is diagnosed with cancer, her illness becomes the catalyst for Pete and his siblings to face their own demons. Bea and Mary Alice - two sisters as different as beer and champagne - struggle to understand how a woman as sophisticated and unrelenting as their mother would neglect her own health. Stu, Pete's successful stockbroker brother with an insensitive wife and a secret that could put him behind bars, chooses withdrawal. Phil - successful businessman, aloof father, and loving husband - is neither certain of his own future nor confident in his role in this adult family. And Pete, desperate to transcend his isolation but afraid to take the risk, becomes the focus of his mother's mission to close the gaps in the family, while there's still time.

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From Library Journal:
Readers unfamiliar with Burroughs and his work will find Birch Browsings adequate as an introduction to his writing and his life, since Burroughs, one of the fathers of American nature studies, inhabits mightily his essays about hiking and birding and fishing for trout. This upstate New York Renaissance man was a friend and biographer of Walt Whitman, a hugely popular essayist for magazines like the Atlantic , and a friend and colleague of John Muir and Teddy Roosevelt. In short, he was a turn-of-the-century figure as prominent as he was prolific (the Riverside edition of his work goes to 20 volumes). Penguin's modest selection of 15 essays (unsourced, which should be illegal) gathers the most Burroughs-like of Burroughs's work, e.g., reflections on honeybees, "tramps" through the Adirondacks, and a nice piece about stalking the nightingale on a visit to England. Renehan's biography, the first since a botched and romanticized job in the 1920s, is a traditional high-point-of-the-month, cradle-to-grave portrait that hints at Burroughs's complexities but struggles when it tries to explain them. Renehan seems to know all there is to know about Burroughs, but it is startling how familiar his life is even to those who know only the few pieces in Birch Browsings . The revelations here are Renehan's frank discussions of Burroughs's unhappy marriage, a thorough examination of his friendship with Whitman, and an account, equally thorough, of Burroughs's political and social activism as a naturalist. Students of Burroughs will enjoy the biography; less avid Burroughs fans may find it heavier going.
- Mark L. Shelton, Athens, Ohio
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Publishers Weekly:
John Burroughs, one of America's most accomplished nature writers of the 19th century, has been resurrected in this enlightening, entertaining collection of 15 essays. McKibben ( The End of Nature ) explains how Burroughs helps us appreciate the "middle kingdom" that is neither urban nor wild by "figuring out a language for making others treasure the small spectacles of nature." The essays are best read individually, as enthusiastic guides through Burroughs's intimate world. According to him, some scenery may be too grand for daily viewing, and Burroughs suggests that one build a house in "a more humble and secluded nook." An observer of nature, he says, needs more than just the habit of attention: "You must have the bird in your heart before you can find it in the bush." Eagerly offering transliterations of nature's sounds (" Pthrung, pthrung, " croaks a frog), Burroughs takes us on trips through the woods, a search for wild honey and an excursion for trout. His favorite companion is "a dog or a boy, or a person who has the virtues of dogs and boys--transparency, good nature, curiosity, open sense." For the reader, Burroughs is such a companion. First serial to the New York Review of Books.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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  • PublisherPenguin Books
  • Publication date1992
  • ISBN 10 0140170162
  • ISBN 13 9780140170160
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages232
  • EditorMcKibben Bill
  • Rating

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Published by Penguin Books (1992)
ISBN 10: 0140170162 ISBN 13: 9780140170160
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