Desert Solitaire a Season in the Wilderness by Edward Abbey Term Paper

Total Length: 1229 words ( 4 double-spaced pages)

Total Sources: 1

Page 1 of 4

American History

A Season in the Wilderness -- by Edward Abbey

The author, Edward Abbey, explains to the reader in the Author's Introduction, what it was like to work for three summer seasons as a "seasonal park ranger" in the Arches National Monument in Utah. He kept a journal during those seasons, which recorded his feelings and his activities: the desert where he worked, he writes, is a "vast world, an oceanic world, as deep in its way and complex and various as the sea." But his book isn't just about the stunning beauty of the land in southwest Utah, although Abbey says (1) the desert where he worked " ... is the most beautiful place on earth."

In fact, Abbey's book is a reflection of his anger at the way in which the park is managed by the Department of the Interior, and other branches of government. In a very unusual introductory statement, Abbey offers an apology (xii) for the fact that "much of the book will seem coarse, rude, bad-tempered, violently prejudiced, unconstructive -- even frankly antisocial in its point-of-view."

Summary

For a person who loves the outdoors, and is comfortable living in a trailer that shakes in the wind and enjoys working in a wild desert environment, serving as a park ranger in the Arches National Monument is a great job, according to the author. He looks at the 33,000 acres of the park upon his arrival and he wants to know it "intimately, deeply, totally, as a man desires a beautiful woman" (5). He describes his love of nature and of wild things ("I'd rather kill a man than a snake") in a kind of reverence bordering on extremism. (But "extreme" is part and parcel of this book, so readers beware!)

It is clear that Abbey truly enjoys and even cherishes mornings in the park, with the "pinyon jays" that whirl "in garrulous, gregarious flocks from one stunted tree to the next and back again" and canyon wrens, ravens, doves -- even the mice.

But above and beyond reporting on the beauty of the park, Abbey writes at length about the park's over-crowded conditions -- and he bitterly condemns the many city-dwellers in their "serpentine streams of baroque automobiles.

Stuck Writing Your "Desert Solitaire a Season in the Wilderness by Edward Abbey" Term Paper?

" He criticizes the tourists in "elaborate housetrailers in quilted aluminum" (44) that prowl the park during the tourist season.

He presents opposing arguments (47) on the issue of opening the park up to more and more tourists by building roads and facilities; his view is that the government should "preserve intact and undiminished what little still remains"; the National Park Service view, he writes, is to allow "certain compromises and adjustments" to be able to meet "the ever-expanding demand for outdoor recreation."

His book is descriptive yet it has many contradictions: on page 95, for example, the author writes about the "lonely hours" in the desert, which are like "a prison term"; but earlier, on page 44, he shows anger at visitors, who arrive in "gigantic camper-trucks of Fiberglas and molded plastic..." And he despises "knobby-kneed oldsters in plaid Bermudas" who roar up and down the new asphalt park roads "on motorbikes."

Abbey also writes very informative narrative about the Native Americans who once lived where he now works, he criticizes the Mormon religion (236), he takes the reader on a nice journey in the back-country along the stark rock formations, and in the end, he shaves his beard, and returns to New York, wondering if he will ever come back to desert.

Criticism / Analysis

First, it is fair to say that the author deserves respect for his ability to describe in great detail all the wildlife (birds, snakes, deer,….....

Show More ⇣


     Open the full completed essay and source list


OR

     Order a one-of-a-kind custom essay on this topic


sample essay writing service

Cite This Resource:

Latest APA Format (6th edition)

Copy Reference
"Desert Solitaire A Season In The Wilderness By Edward Abbey" (2004, December 02) Retrieved June 5, 2026, from
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/desert-solitaire-season-wilderness-edward-59374

Latest MLA Format (8th edition)

Copy Reference
"Desert Solitaire A Season In The Wilderness By Edward Abbey" 02 December 2004. Web.5 June. 2026. <
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/desert-solitaire-season-wilderness-edward-59374>

Latest Chicago Format (16th edition)

Copy Reference
"Desert Solitaire A Season In The Wilderness By Edward Abbey", 02 December 2004, Accessed.5 June. 2026,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/desert-solitaire-season-wilderness-edward-59374