"Lessons from 'Walden' [is] an extraordinary book. . . . It offers a compelling, well-thought out argument about the relevance of Thoreau in our political time.” —Perspectives on Politics
"The year of a presidential election seems like a particularly good time to revisit the qualities necessary for American self-governance. Bob Pepperman Taylor’s book, Lessons from Walden: Thoreau and the Crisis of American Democracy attempts to do just that. Reaching back to Jacksonian democracy, Taylor uses Henry David Thoreau as a tour guide to reveal the threats and temptations in the contemporary American landscape." —Law and Liberty
"What would Thoreau say about the latest rise of populism and threats to the environment? 'One of the points I make is that Walden doesn’t provide prescriptions for political crisis,' Taylor said. 'Thoreau's . . . contribution helps us think beyond the immediate crisis, to how we can each live as more responsible citizens.'” —EurekAlert.org
“Lessons from 'Walden' is a welcome tonic in this moment of political and environmental crisis. Bob Pepperman Taylor’s always-trenchant and insightful analysis reveals Thoreau’s enduring relevance for modern democracies. His lessons are both important and timely.” —Kimberly Smith, author of The Conservation Constitution
“Lessons from 'Walden' delivers exactly what its title promises—an educational guide for an individual life committed to simplicity, moral responsibility, and ethical integrity. Like Thoreau, Taylor's goal is to wake us up.” —Sandra Harbert Petrulionis, author of Thoreau in His Own Time
“A reading of Thoreau for the age of Trump—and really for any moment when our courage as individuals and as a polity seems to be flagging. This is a book that will make you think, and perhaps even act!” —Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature and Falter
“Lessons from 'Walden' allows Thoreau to enter today’s conversation in a way that seldom happens: Bob Taylor's measured and fair-minded mediation allows the fullness of Thoreau’s stance to appear to the reader with all his contradictions intact. The result is a true conversation in which Thoreau becomes the springboard to further deliberation. Time and again, Taylor returns to Thoreau as to a moral lodestone, bringing the discussion to a reasoned conclusion that still leaves one thinking.” —Laura Dassow Walls, author of Henry David Thoreau: A Life
“Bob Taylor’s Lessons from'Walden' brings Thoreau’s classic text to bear on the present moment, into Trump’s America, into an age of environmental degradation, into a time of cultural self-absorption, instrumental rationality, and neoliberal indifference to what is local, communal, and particular.” —Shannon Mariotti, author of Thoreau’s Democratic Withdrawal
"I think we could say Walden was the first minimalist, and I hope this book by Taylor will encourage more readers to go back to Walden, for a better future for all. A very thoughtful study of Henry David Thoreau’s main works, and how they are still essential inspirations and teachings for us today, for the survival and well-being of us all, as individuals, as society, and as stewards of nature." —Words and Peace
"An apostle of freedom, Thoreau advocates letting each person step to the music of the drummer that he hears. Taylor clarifies that while Thoreau believes that this applies to a person’s way of life—he does not think it applies to a person’s morality. 'We all may have different paths of moral discovery,' Taylor writes, 'but the content of what is to be discovered is eternal and unchanging for Thoreau.'" —Thoreau Society Bulletin