"<i>Thoreau’s God </i>is impressive in scope. Through extensive research and review of Thoreau’s voluminous writing, Higgins chronicles the lifelong evolution of his belief, from his early disparaging of Christianity and the church to his 'eclectic, experiential, noninstitutional spirituality' which is so popular today.”

The Christian Century

"When so many politically progressive books feel didactic, it is refreshing to read one that doesn’t. . . . [<i>Thoreau’s God</i>] offers insight into Thoreau not as a naturalist or a secular ascetic but as someone who believed strongly in God as love. Regardless of your religious beliefs, this book is worth reading for anyone interested in American religious experience."

America Magazine

"Facing a vast, elusive riddle of a subject, Higgins tries to let himself behold. <i>Thoreau’s God</i> is a rich, rewarding study that meanders where Thoreau meanders, considers where Thoreau considers, and simply beholds where Thoreau beholds. "

Commonweal

Se alle

"[Higgins] takes on the task of perusing through the great timberland of Thoreau’s writing, less to make the case for a definitive angle of identity but to fashion compelling Thoreauvian perspectives, even meditations, on the question.”

Chicago Review of Books

“[Readers] will come away with a nuanced understanding of Thoreau’s religious thought, thanks to the author’s fine-grained and surprisingly poetic analysis. It’s a worthy reconsideration of an important American philosopher.”

Publishers Weekly

"An eloquent and accessible statement of the . . . sheer wildness of Thoreau’s religion. Thoreau’s religion is contradictory in the same ways that wild nature is contradictory: at once nurturing and predatory, unified and diverse, deeply rooted and newly sprouted."

The New England Quarterly

"[No] book captures the breadth and evolution of Thoreau’s religious understanding as well as Richard Higgins’ <i>Thoreau’s God</i>."

Notre Dame Magazine

"Higgins shows how Thoreau’s spiritual quest was suffused throughout his writings—often laced with paradox and references to the Bible, sacred Hindu texts, and Confucianism—as he strove to live in right relation to God, nature, and humankind."

Choice

"Higgins reveals in seventeen chapters how his subject was a spiritual seeker with a religious imagination from beginning to end."

- Jon M. Sweeney, Spirituality and Practice

"<i>Thoreau’s God </i>is an invitation to join hands with the transcendentalist, explore nature, find out who or what God is to you, and develop (or refine) your personal spiritual practices to honor that divine mystery."

Washington Independent Review of Books

"“Thoreau’s God” focuses not only on Thoreau’s brilliance, wit and authorship, but also cites many of his major influences and supporters with references to and quoted material from such spiritualists and naturalists . . . "

- Thomas Crowe, Smoky Mountain News

"Higgins persuasively leads his readers on something of a pilgrim’s progress through the complexities of Thoreau’s religious thinking . . . <i>Thoreau’s God</i> is an excellent exposition of Thoreau’s complicated and ever-developing religious ideas. It is especially helpful in locating the place in his thinking of concepts such as nature, soul, church (dismissed by Thoreau), divinity, and redemption. <i>Thoreau’s God</i> is a work of learning and true sensitivity."

Modern Philology

“<i>Thoreau’s God</i> is the most subtle and probing assessment yet of the many senses in which this emphatic but elusive thinker must be understood as a deeply religious person.”

- Lawrence Buell, author of 'Henry David Thoreau: Thinking Disobediently',

“Thoreau was a practical man, but he was also in some sense a mystic—no one has ever been more open to the world around him. This fascinating book tries to understand Thoreau’s sense of the divine, which in some ways very much prefigures the unorthodox syncretism of our day.”

- Bill McKibben, author of 'The End of Nature',

“If you have ever felt lost in this world of fractured faith, then pick up this book and let Higgins take you on a walk with one of America’s most profound and thoughtful religious writers: Henry David Thoreau. It won’t be an easy path, for Thoreau’s God lives in no church but out in a world of paradoxes. And Thoreau insisted that even the best of books can only point the way, through words poetic enough to say what cannot be said: that true religion lies not in what you profess, but in how you live. Higgins shows us a mind and heart at work during a troubled time, a fellow human being knocking at the door of God and hearing an answer that guided him for life.”

- Laura Dassow Walls, author of 'Henry David Thoreau: A Life',

Meditative reflections on the great spiritual seeker’s deeply felt experience of the divine.

Henry David Thoreau’s spiritual life is a riddle. Thoreau’s passionate critique of formal religion is matched only by his rapturous descriptions of encounters with the divine in nature. He fled the church only to pursue a deeper communion with a presence he felt at the heart of the universe. He called this illimitable presence many names, but he often called it God.

In Thoreau’s God, Richard Higgins invites seekers—religious or otherwise—to walk with the great Transcendentalist through a series of meditations on his spiritual life. Thoreau offers us no creed, but his writings encourage reflection on how to live, what to notice, and what to love. Though his quest was deeply personal, Thoreau devoted his life to communicating his experience of an infinite, wild, life-giving God. By recovering this vital thread in Thoreau’s life and work, Thoreau’s God opens the door to a new understanding of an original voice in American religion that speaks to spiritual seekers today.
Les mer
Introduction: Thoreau’s Religious Quest
One: An Offering to the Gods
Two: The Shaping of a Seeker
Three: To Reverence, Not to Fear
Four: The Seen and the Unseen
Five: A Puritan Golden Calf
Six: Rejecting Repentance
Seven: “Dealt With by Superior Powers”
Eight: A Pantheon with an Open Roof
Nine: Thoreau’s God
Ten: To “Fable the Ineffable”
Eleven: An Immortal Companion
Twelve: Thoreau and the “Prince of Radicals”
Thirteen: An Inkwell in Heaven
Fourteen: “Go Thou My Incense”
Fifteen: “I Hear the Unspeakable”
Sixteen: “A Place beyond All Place”
Seventeen: Thoreau’s Refining Fire

Acknowledgments
A Note on Sources
Notes
Index
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780226827308
Publisert
2024-11-19
Utgiver
The University of Chicago Press
Vekt
399 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
224

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Richard Higgins is a former staff writer at the Boston Globe and the author or editor of four books, including Thoreau and the Language of Trees. His articles, essays, and reviews have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Christian Century, and American Scholar.