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Followed by the Lark

A Novel

Helen Humphreys

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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ISBN10: 0374611491
ISBN13: 9780374611491

Hardcover

240 Pages

$27.00

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Composed in small scenes, Followed by the Lark is a novel of meditations—on loss, on change, on the danger and healing that come from communion with the natural world.

Henry David Thoreau's connection to nature was tied to his feelings of grief; before he was twenty-seven years old and went to live at Walden Pond, two of those closest to him had died—his older brother, John, and his friend Charles Wheeler. Nature provided solace for these losses, but the world was changing around him. The forests were being destroyed by the logging industry. Wildlife was increasingly slaughtered for profit and sport. The railroad clanged through his quiet hometown. And the catastrophes of the American Civil War were beginning to stir just as his own life was coming to an end. Haunting in its quiet spaces, in the way it imagines the missed connections in his relationships, Followed by the Lark is uncommon in its combination of scope and brevity, in its communion with its subject while still maintaining critical distance.

Thoreau’s life in the early nineteenth century seems firmly in the past, but his time bears striking similarities to ours. As she explores these intersections in Followed by the Lark, Helen Humphreys elegantly, insistently illustrates how Thoreau’s concerns are still, vitally, our own.

Reviews

Praise for Followed by the Lark

“This Thoreau is flawed, human, muddling through, and yet also prescient about the consequences of empire and what some called progress. Followed by the Lark is a beautiful threnody and elegy for what is lost as we grow and what is destroyed by colonization.”—Sarah Moss, author of The Fell

“What a balm, this book, the way it returns us to the nouns of the world: the birds, the stones, the stumps, an apple in the pocket, a brother, a pond. It made me want to go outside. By inhabiting Thoreau, letting us walk with him through the Concord woods, Followed by the Lark shows the natural world offering order against the messy stuff of human life—its disappointments, confusions, periods of lockjawed grief. With muscle and melancholy, it reminds us that a sense of meaning rises from a sense of place, and that attention is a form of reverence, and love.”—Nina MacLaughlin, author of Wake, Siren

Followed by the Lark unfolds like friendship itself: the initial surprise, delightful as the first bluebird of spring, followed by the long years and sneakily brief seasons of mutual discoveries, tensions, and shared losses. Helen Humphreys has written a textured, intimate companion to our factual knowledge of Thoreau, and, in the meantime, evoked a longing in this reader for a deeper connection to the natural world. A gem of a book.”—Christopher Castellani, author of Leading Men

“Helen Humphreys has given us a Thoreau tenderly, mindfully observed in moments to be experienced much as the good surveyor of Concord did himself: with a sauntering curiosity that brings life into our hearts, bearing all its freshness, all its depths and contradictions. I will treasure this book.”—Trevor Herriot, author of The Economy of Sparrows

“[An] affectionate meander through the life of Henry David Thoreau . . . whose enthusiasts will find much to delight here.”Kirkus Reviews

Reviews from Goodreads

BOOK EXCERPTS

Read an Excerpt

1822~1838

THE axes were swung at waist height by the loggers, so the stumps they left behind were taller than five-year-old Henry. He stumbled through the forest of stumps towards the shimmer of silver, a colour he had only seen before as...

About the author

Helen Humphreys

Helen Humphreys is an acclaimed, award-winning author of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Her work includes the novels The Evening Chorus, Coventry, and Afterimage, and the nonfiction books And a Dog Called Fig, The Ghost Orchard, and The Frozen Thames. She has won the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize, the Toronto Book Award, and a Lambda Literary Award, and has been a finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award for Fiction, the Trillium Book Award, and CBC Radio’s Canada Reads.

Ayelet Tsabari