Transcendentalism Council of First Parish in Concord presents

 

Geoff Wisner

Geoff Wisner is an author and editor based in New York City. His essays and book reviews have appeared in The African, African Review of Books, Asymptote, Boston Book Review, Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, New York Times, QBR, The Quarterly Conversation, Transition, Wall Street Journal, Warscapes, Weird Fiction Review, Wild Earth, and Words Without Borders.

Geoff was born and raised in upstate New York, and earned a degree in English and American literature and language from Harvard University. As the Assistant Director of the US office of the International Defense and Aid Fund for Southern Africa, he worked for the legal defense of political prisoners in South Africa and Namibia. He is currently a board member of the Thoreau Society.

Geoff Wisner, editor of
A Year of Birds: Writings on Birds from the Journal of Henry David Thoreau

Saturday, October 26, 2024

7:00 PM

Wright Tavern
2 Lexington Road, Concord

A work of art as well as a work of literature, A Year of Birds will be welcomed by nature lovers, art lovers, and birders. With 150 watercolors and field sketches by renowned bird artist Barry Van Dusen and a foreword by celebrated naturalist Peter Alden, the author of numerous Audubon Field Guides, Henry David Thoreau's writings on birds are showcased in a way never seen before. Unlike previous collections, the observations in A Year of Birds are arranged by the day of the year, emphasizing the relationship of birds with their environment and the spiritual significance of the seasons. On any given day, curious readers might step into their yards and compare the birds they observe with those that Thoreau saw and heard. With a focus on the town of Concord, Massachusetts, where Thoreau spent most of his life, A Year of Birds includes the best of Thoreau's unparalleled descriptions of birds, from the red-tailed hawk to the Blackburnian warbler. Also included are descriptions of bird hunting, birds in museums, and birds as metaphor. Special sections are devoted to the now-vanished passenger pigeon and to Thoreau's mysterious "night warbler."


WORKS