What We Are Reading Today: ‘Wonderstruk’

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Updated 16 September 2023
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Wonderstruk’

Author: HELEN DE CRUZ

Wonder and awe lie at the heart of life’s most profound questions. “Wonderstruck” shows how these emotions respond to our fundamental need to make sense of ourselves and everything around us, and how they enable us to engage with the world as if we are experiencing it for the first time.
Drawing on the latest psychological insights on the emotions, Helen De Cruz argues that wonder and awe are emotional drives that motivate us to inquire
and discover new things, and that humanity has deliberately nurtured these emotions in cultural domains such as religion, science, and magic.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Correspondence

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Updated 02 February 2026
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What We Are Reading Today: The Correspondence

  • During this period, Thoreau was well established as a writer and lecturer, and he continued to pursue the interests and activities that had occupied him earlier in the 1850s

Author: Henry David D. Thoreau

This is the third and final volume of the first full-scale scholarly edition of Thoreau’s correspondence in more than half a century. Together, the volumes present every known letter written or received by Thoreau, almost 650 in all, including more than 100 that have never been published before.

“Correspondence 3: 1857–1862” contains 239 letters, 121 written by Thoreau and 118 written to him. Sixty-seven letters are collected here for the first time; of these, 44 have not been published before, including five dated between 1837 and 1855 that are included in an addenda. 

During this period, Thoreau was well established as a writer and lecturer, and he continued to pursue the interests and activities that had occupied him earlier in the 1850s. 

Letters document the publication of “Chesuncook” (1858) and “An Address on the Succession of Forest Trees” (1860), as well as his preparations, a few months before his death, for the posthumous publication of “The Maine Woods “ and the essays “Walking,” “Autumnal Tints,” “Wild Apples,” and “Life without Principle.”