The young John Muir : an environmental biography / Steven J. Holmes.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Madison, WI : University of Wisconsin Press, c1999.Description: xv, 309 p. : ill. 24 cmISBN:
  • 299161501
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • QH 31.M9 .H738 1999
Summary: As founder of the Sierra Club and promoter of the national parks, as a passionate nature writer and as a principal figure of the environmental movement, John Muir stands as a powerful symbol of connection with the natural world. But how did Muir's own relationship with nature begin? In this pioneering book, Steven J. Holmes offers a dramatically new interpretation of Muir's formative years, one that reveals the agony as well as the elation of his earliest experiences of nature. From his childhood in Scotland and Wisconsin through his young adulthood in the Midwest and Canada, Muir struggled -- often without success -- to find a place for himself both in nature and in society. Far from granting comfort, the natural world confronted the young Muir with a full range of practical, emotional, and religious conflicts. Only with the help of his family, his religion, and the extraordinary power of nature itself could Muir in his late twenties find a welcoming vision of nature as home -- a vision that would shape his lifelong environmental experience, most immediately in his transformative travels through the South and to the Yosemite Valley. 'www.alibris.com".
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 289-297) and index.

As founder of the Sierra Club and promoter of the national parks, as a passionate nature writer and as a principal figure of the environmental movement, John Muir stands as a powerful symbol of connection with the natural world. But how did Muir's own relationship with nature begin? In this pioneering book, Steven J. Holmes offers a dramatically new interpretation of Muir's formative years, one that reveals the agony as well as the elation of his earliest experiences of nature. From his childhood in Scotland and Wisconsin through his young adulthood in the Midwest and Canada, Muir struggled -- often without success -- to find a place for himself both in nature and in society. Far from granting comfort, the natural world confronted the young Muir with a full range of practical, emotional, and religious conflicts. Only with the help of his family, his religion, and the extraordinary power of nature itself could Muir in his late twenties find a welcoming vision of nature as home -- a vision that would shape his lifelong environmental experience, most immediately in his transformative travels through the South and to the Yosemite Valley. 'www.alibris.com".

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