Three Roads Back
How Emerson, Thoreau, and William James Responded to the Greatest Losses of Their Lives
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- £16.99
Publisher Description
From their acclaimed biographer, a final, powerful book about how Emerson, Thoreau, and William James forged resilience from devastating loss, changing the course of American thought
In Three Roads Back, Robert Richardson, the author of magisterial biographies of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and William James, tells the connected stories of how these foundational American writers and thinkers dealt with personal tragedies early in their careers. For Emerson, it was the death of his young wife and, eleven years later, his five-year-old son; for Thoreau, it was the death of his brother; and for James, it was the death of his beloved cousin Minnie Temple. Filled with rich biographical detail and unforgettable passages from the journals and letters of Emerson, Thoreau, and James, these vivid and moving stories of loss and hard-fought resilience show how the writers’ responses to these deaths helped spur them on to their greatest work, influencing the birth and course of American literature and philosophy.
In reaction to his traumatic loss, Emerson lost his Unitarian faith and found solace in nature. Thoreau, too, leaned on nature and its regenerative power, discovering that “death is the law of new life,” an insight that would find expression in Walden. And James, following a period of panic and despair, experienced a redemptive conversion and new ideas that would drive his work as a psychologist and philosopher. As Richardson shows, all three emerged from their grief with a new way of seeing, one shaped by a belief in what Emerson called “the deep remedial force that underlies all facts.”
An inspiring book about resilience and the new growth and creativity that can stem from devastating loss, Three Roads Back is also an extraordinary account of the hidden wellsprings of American thought.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and William James had their ideas solidified and their writing shaped by the deaths of loved ones, according to this stimulating posthumous survey from Richardson (William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism), who died in 2020. Using a technique he calls "documentary biography," which lets his subjects "tell their stories in their own words as much as possible" via their letters and journals, Richardson makes a case that the three can teach their readers great resilience, as each carried on despite the losses. In Richardson's account, Emerson lost his faith, resigned from his position as a minister, and became a naturalist as he was coping with the death of his wife, Ellen; Thoreau began ruminating on what became his "mature philosophical vision" as a result of his brother, John's, death; and out of Minnie Temple's early death "arrived" her cousin James's central psychological insight of "resisting the ego to the world." Richard moves swiftly and confidently among his subjects, and successfully ditches "a detached, critical, or judgmental" approach in favor of a moving, candid group portrait. Fans and students of American literature will find this worth picking up.