The forest A fable of America in the 1830s

Alexander Nemerov

Book - 2023

"Set amid the glimmering lakes and disappearing forests of the United States in the 1830s, The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s imagines how individuals at the time experienced their lives. Part truth, part fiction, this book follows painters, poets, enslaved individuals, farmers, and artisans through various settings. Some, such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nat Turner, Thomas Cole, and Edgar Allan Poe, are well-known; others are not. All are creators of private and grand designs, and makers of the worlds they inhabited. The Forest unfolds in brief stories. Each is an episode revealing a lost world of intricate relations: human beings going their own ways or crossing paths, in a place that is known to history, or is remote and unknow...n. For Alex Nemerov, the forest is a description of American society, as he writes, "the dense and discontinuous woods of nation, the foliating thoughts of different people, each with their separate life to lead." Nemerov's art history is at its center an experiment in writing, in how to write differently about visual culture. The Forest examines the history of the United States on a human scale, displaying the patterns of life alongside examples of paintings, prints, photographs and objects"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Creative nonfiction
Published
Princeton : Princeton University Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Alexander Nemerov (author)
Physical Description
277 pages, 48 pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780691244280
  • Herodotus among the trees
  • The tavern to the traveler
  • Come, thick night
  • Panic
  • Animals are where they are
  • The clocks of Forestville
  • Supernatural
  • Four greens
  • Three levitations
  • Postscript: the shield.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Beguiling study of American intellectual and cultural life two centuries ago at the places where forests and civilization met. "Reading books, filling in the blanks with my imagination, I sought to restore the stories of the figures in the original I had not seen, which itself was a record of what the chronicler-carver perhaps only dreamed when he invented the life of his times." So writes Stanford humanities professor Nemerov of a mysterious carved box that, long ago, poked its way out of a streambank. It's not the only mystery in the pages of this luminous book. Another is the odd vision of a figure painted in the crook of a tree high above a Virginia forest floor, both startling and delighting its discoverer, who took the opportunity to "ponder the fact that his imagination gave rise to such phantoms." Nemerov is a collector of such forest-born visions. Some are exalted, as when, early in this episodic, anecdotal narrative, Nathaniel Hawthorne finds in the New England woods a metaphor for his work. "For him," writes Nemerov, "trees were brains, arbors of thought, much like his own." Some are economic: Groves of hemlock are felled in order to cure livestock hides, with a noxious load of acids and blood dumped into a pristine Hudson River. Some are ominous: Nat Turner retreats to "a self-secluded place in the woods" to plan his uprising of enslaved people. Nemerov delights in turning up surprises that inform his pointed tales. His discovery of the story of David Douglas, who lent the Douglas fir his name and whose life ended tragically in a trap meant to protect gardens from rampaging cattle, is a feat of scholarly detection. So is his restoration to history of an Irish immigrant who, sadly, fell from an elm he was trimming, a narrative frame within which the author discusses anti-immigrant sentiment. A lively history of the early republic, its branches coming together to form a sturdy whole. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.