Skip to product information
1 of 1

Audubon

Regular price $40.95
Regular price $40.95 Sale price $40.95
Sold out
The compelling story of a legendary artist and an eternal American hero. "In 1803, an eighteen-year-old West Indies–born Frenchman arrived in New York City, fleeing Napoleon’s conscription. His wo...
Read More
  • 03 September 2013
View Product Details
In 1803, an eighteen-year-old West Indies–born Frenchman arrived in New York City, fleeing Napoleon’s conscription. His work would become inextricably entwined with the new world he so proudly adopted in his motto “America, my country.”

Inspired by the primeval forests and the vast flocks of birds that thrived in them, Audubon spent the next several decades of his life painstakingly documenting the birds of the American wilderness. He traveled the back roads and bayous, searching out and studying the birds that were his pastime and passion. He spent long, silent hours observing them in the wild. He was no amateur ornithologist; rather, he drew his birds from life, and his work always carried the line “drawn from nature by J. J. Audubon.”

Accompanied by his wife, Lucy, and their two sons, Audubon was able to challenge the world’s expectations and win. The story of this loving family’s long, profound struggle is as poignant and as relevant today as it was in the early decades of the nineteenth century.

Combining meticulous scholarship with the dramatic life story of a naturalist and pioneer, Audubon reexamines the artist's journals and letters to tell the story of Audubon's quest, the origins of the American spirit, and the sacrifice that resulted in one of the world's greatest bodies of art: The Birds of America.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $40.95
Pages: 528
Publisher: Turner Publishing Company
Imprint: Turner
Publication Date: 03 September 2013
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781630262747
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
""A scintillating biography, a richly detailed story of romance, separation, and struggle." —Publishers Weekly

"Streshinsky's riveting new biography . . . infuses this man's career with the same vigorous spark of real life that Audubon uniquely brought to the depiction of America's birds." —Los Angeles Times

"Vividly evokes what it was like to settle in new frontier communities, to travel in America and overseas and to try to earn a living in the economically uncertain early years of the nineteenth century." —New York Times Book Review

"A solid narrative biography, the first popular life of the artist in a quarter century . . . The Audubon depicted here is buoyant, gifted, and vain." —Boston Globe

"A portrait as vivid as any of Audubon's." San Francisco Chronicle
Foreword
Acknowledgments

BOOK ONE
The Woodsman

BOOK TWO
The Artist and Naturalist

Bibliography
Notes
Index