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Ben Shattuck - Six Walks: In the Footsteps of Henry David Thoreau

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Ben Shattuck Six Walks: In the Footsteps of Henry David Thoreau
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Six Walks: In the Footsteps of Henry David Thoreau: summary, description and annotation

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A New Yorker Best Book of 2022

A New England Indie Bestselller

A New York Times Best Book of Summer, a Wall Street Journal and Town & Country Best Book of Spring

A gorgeous reminder that walking is the most radical form of locomotion nowadays. Nick Offerman

I think Thoreau would have liked this book, and thats a high recommendation. Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

On an autumn morning in 1849, Henry David Thoreau stepped out his front door to walk the beaches of Cape Cod. Over a century and a half later, Ben Shattuck does the same. With little more than a loaf of bread, brick of cheese, and a notebook, Shattuck sets out to retrace Thoreaus path through the Capes outer beaches, from the elbow to Provincetowns fingertip.

This is the first of six journeys taken by Shattuck, each one inspired by a walk once taken by Henry David Thoreau. After the Cape, Shattuck goes up Mount Katahdin and Mount Wachusett, down the coastline of his hometown, and then through the Allagash. Along the way, Shattuck encounters unexpected characters, landscapes, and stories, seeing for himself the restorative effects that walking can have on a dampened spirit. Over years of following Thoreau, Shattuck finds himself uncovering new insights about family, love, friendship, and fatherhood, and understanding more deeply the lessons walking can offer through lifes changing seasons.

Intimate, entertaining, and beautifully crafted, Six Walks is a resounding tribute to the ways walking in nature can inspire us all.

Ben Shattuck: author's other books


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Six Walks In the Footsteps of Henry David Thoreau - image 1

SIX WALKS

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Six Walks In the Footsteps of Henry David Thoreau - image 3

A step taken by a person in walking, especially as heard by another person.

Part One

We will remember within what walls we lie, and understand that this level life too has its summit, and why from the mountain-top the deepest valleys have a tinge of blue; that there is elevation in every hour, as no part of the earth is so low that the heavens may not be seen from, and we have only to stand on the summit of our hour to command an uninterrupted horizon.

Henry David Thoreau, twenty-five years old
(July 1842)

Cape Cod

The idea to follow Henry David Thoreaus walks came while I was standing in the shower at dawn one May morning, listening to the water drill my skull and lap my ears, wondering what I could do to stop the dreams of my past girlfriend. This was years ago, in my early thirties, when I couldnt find a way out of the doubt, fear, shame, and sadness that had arranged a constellation of grief around me. In this last dream, the one that got me into the shower at sunrise, she was in labor. I dreamt that she had a husbanddark-haired, wearing a red shirt with sleeves rolled to his elbowswho stood bedside, gripping her hand while she breathed. I stood against the wall, touching a white handkerchief that I wanted to offer them. She looked up at her husband. He closed his hands over hers. I wanted to leave the room, but stayed because my legs werent working just then. I kept touching the hem of the handkerchief. The baby came. There were three of us in the room, and then there were four.

In the shower, between the scenes of the birth, came to me images of a young, bearded man standing on an empty beach, wind whipping at his coattails, the ocean pounding in front of him. He was smiling. Plainly happy. I saw him crouch to pick up a bone of driftwood. I saw him in a lighthouse, writing in his journal by a flickering candle flame; wading through dune grasswalking stick clocking with each step. It was Henry, pictured from his book Cape Cod, which Id been reading every night that week.

I stepped from the shower. Out the window, the tide, set higher than usual by some phase of the moon, drowned the marsh grass. The blush of sunrise candied the water pink. Living by a salt marsh on the southern coast of Massachusetts, I noticed the passing of a day divided by the floor of the landscape dropping and rising. High tides feel favorable, as does anything overfullwaterfall, blooming peony, snow-bent tree limb, spilt milkweed seeds. The high tide felt purposeful, then. The ocean leaning inland, urging.

I dressed quickly in my bathing suit and a sweater, made a cup of coffee, emptied my backpack onto the kitchen table and filled it with a loaf of bread, a brick of cheddar cheese, three apples, a bag of carrots, a rain jacket, and my copy of Cape Cod.

I wasI knew thengoing to Cape Cod. I would walk the outer beaches, from the elbow to Provincetowns fingertip, as Henry had done. If it took a day, or three, I didnt mind. I had nothing else to do that week. Days before, Id driven all the way to a monastery in Vermont to choose ceramics for an exhibit I was curating about art made by monks and nuns, and on the way back stopped by my old high school for the reception of a recent painting showa show on which Id worked too hard and included too many paintings, because, probably, of adolescences anxious cinders still warm in me, decades later. I didnt feel like painting anything, anymore, for a long time.

Before I walked out the door that morning, I also put a notebook in my backpack, not because I ever journaled or made sketches, but because Henry had, and I wanted to try someone elses habits for a few days.

During the hour drive from my home to the Cape, I fantasized that Id replicate the peace and higher perspective Henry had documented in that seam of land and sea. The sea-shore is a sort of neutral ground, he wrote, a most advantageous point from which to contemplate this world. I didnt expect sublime perspective; I hoped only for a respite from my nightmares, for the waves and wind and weather to reshape the masses of my subconscious as they had shifted the dunes of Wellfleet, Truro, and Provincetown. Isnt this always the hope, heading out for a long walk? That in your aloneness the landscape will relieve you? That your mind will be renewed, calmed?

I crossed the Bourne Bridge and sped into a roundabout, driving so fast that my coffee mug tumbled from the cup holder.

When Henry started this walk at age thirty-two in 1849, he wore a broad-brimmed hat designed with a miniature shelf to hold the flowers he found. He dressed in an earthen-toned three-piece suit, and always carried his spyglass for bird-watching. His knapsack was rigged with a compartment for his booksone for pressing flowershis sewing materials, his fishing line, and a handful of fishing hooks. He walked with an umbrella tilted over his shoulder to keep the sand and wind off his neck, and with a special walking stick doubling as a ruler that he used to measure plants. He took a goose-quill pen with which he wrote in luxurious horizontal flourisheshis ys look windblown, the crosses of his ts like distant hills. He packed salt for seasoning, sugar and tea, and a junk of heavy cake with plums. He was a sinewy, exercised country saunterer, handsomely dressed and carrying with him all the items for misadventure, like a flowery battleship.

Whereas I, standing on the Nauset dunes and staring out to the open palm of the Atlantic, looked as if Id just disembarked a red-eye and had a deep misunderstanding of the current season. The cold May morning wind seized my legs, exposed beneath my bathing suit, but I was sweating from the waist up under two shirts, a sweater, a rain jacket, and a winter hat. Henry wore special boots that he slathered with paraffin; my running shoes were held together in the front with duct tape. The sand tore away this tape in the first mile before filleting the soles of the shoes halfway off, so I tied the shoes to my backpack, which meant that in the next couple of days, the dozens of miles of sand would knead blisters between my toes, on the uppermost part of the arch, and, weirdly, on the very tops of my big toes. But the worst was the sun. I hadnt packed any sunscreen. And because summer in New England comes like a gunshot after winter, my calves would go from ice white to red by the time I stumbled up to a strangers house in Wellfleet many hours later, knocking on the door and hoping for a place to sleep, because, as it turned out, Id also forgotten a sleeping bag in my rush to escape my own bed.

The beach is a vast morgue, Henry wrote, where famished dogs may range in packs, and crows come daily to glean the pittance which the tide leaves them.

You usually come to the seashore to spend the day with broad wings of sand flanking your sides and the fan of ocean in frontyou plant an umbrella and dash into the water a few times. Beaches arent known or loved for hiking, because, I soon realized, they offer a monotonous, unchanging landscape. On my left, for miles, a hundred feet of red sand and clay peeking into a salt-killed rim of bayberry, huckleberry, and the odd scrub pine wherein song sparrows trilled the famous first notes of Beethovens Fifth. To my right, the flat sea, profound at first but unremarkable thereafter. And so my eyes fell to the ground, to this vast morgue, to see what items the ocean had returned to shore that morning. Beaches do have a tang of fate. The smooth stones, the ringed stones, the tired driftwood, the dead looncrook-necked and constellated in white dots on black feathersseem there for a reason. The Legos, cow femur, wooden chair propped upright and facing out to sea, three pennies whose Lincolns had worn to blurry portraits, nickel reduced to the size and thinness of a dime, Red Sox hat, Patriots hat, fish vertebrae, and giant bullet shell whose tip had filigreed to metal lacework.

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