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  • Published: 15 April 2017
  • ISBN: 9781841593777
  • Imprint: Everyman
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 696
  • RRP: $35.00

Selected Writings (Muir)



A new volume collecting the seminal writings of America's first naturalist and the founder of the modern conservation movement.

This volume of John Muir's selected writings chronicles the key turning points in his life and study of the American wilderness. The Story of My Boyhood and Youth is Muir's account of his childhood on a Wisconsin farm, where his interest in nature was first piqued; in The Mountains of California, The Yosemite, and Travels in Alaska we follow him on long journeys into stunning mountain ranges and valleys, where he records native flora and fauna and finds proof of his theories of the effect of glaciers on landscape formation. These four full-length works--along with a selection of important essays also included here--helped galvanize American naturalists, leading to the founding of the Sierra Club and several national parks. In these pages, written with meticulous thoroughness and an impassioned lyricism, we witness Muir's awakening to the incredible beauty of our planet, and the honing of an eye turned as acutely toward the scientific as the spiritual.

  • Published: 15 April 2017
  • ISBN: 9781841593777
  • Imprint: Everyman
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 696
  • RRP: $35.00

About the author

John Muir

JOHN MUIR, bom in Dunbar, Scotland, in 1838, was a writer, explorer, and naturalist, and the founder of the Sierra Club. He receives much of the credit for the preservation of Yosemite Valley and is often called the "Father of Our National Park System." After immigrating with his family to a Wisconsin farm at the age of eleven, he became a wide traveler in his youth, making a celebrated 1,000-mile walk from Indiana to the Florida coast. From there he took a steamer around Cape Horn to San Francisco, where he set off on foot once again, this time with a herd of sheep, for the Sierra Nevada Mountains. From that day forward, he would become an inexhaustible source for the preservation of wilderness in America. He died in 1914.

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