| + + − | Dial. 41: 232. O. 16, ’06. 2880w. |
“Have the interest of an autobiography, and will be read for more light upon one of the most piquant and romantic careers among American scholars and reformers. For the full understanding of this part of the copious work, many more notes and explanations are needed than the editors had room to afford even had they the needful knowledge.” F. B. Sanborn.
| + + − | Dial. 42: 107. F. 16, ’07. 2140w. (Review of v. 8–20.) |
“If we should quarrel with it for anything it would be for its too great abundance. Much is trivial, yet much also is of extraordinary interest.”
| + + − | Nation. 84: 56. Ja. 17, ’07. 220w. (Review of v. 11–20.) |
“Mr. Torrey is an accomplished writer as well as a well-known naturalist. His introductions are of a quality rare in such performances. They are free from the spirit of hero-worship or of hero-manufacture; now and then they perhaps approach the other extreme.” H. W. Boynton.
| + + − | N. Y. Times. 11: 681. O. 20, ’06. (Review of v. 1–10.) | |
| + + | N. Y. Times. 12: 427. Jl. 6, ’07. 990w. |
Thoreau, Henry David. [Cape Cod]; with an introd. by Annie R. Marble. 35c. Crowell.
7–37720.
Uniform with the “Handy volume classics.”