The Deerslayer

The Deerslayer by James Fenimore Cooper, published by Oxford University Press in 1993, is a significant work in the Leatherstocking tales, comprising 556 pages in English. This novel, written in 1841, serves as a prequel to the adventures of Natty Bumppo, exploring his youth in a pristine wilderness. Cooper’s narrative marks a return to historical romance, shifting focus from social and political commentary to a world of adventure and romance, while also addressing his contemporary challenges.
Readers will find that The Deerslayer not only presents thrilling escapades but also critiques nineteenth-century American society through its portrayal of characters and their interactions. The novel reflects themes of possession and loss, as discussed in the Introduction by H. Daniel Peck, which delves into the enduring appeal of Cooper’s work. This edition offers the authoritative text, allowing readers to engage with the historical and cultural contexts of Colonial America and the literary heritage that shapes this classic narrative.
Official synopsis Publisher
The Deerslayer (1841) is the last-written of Cooper’s Leatherstocking tales, but the first in the development of the hero, Natty Bumppo. Here Cooper returns Leatherstocking to his youth and to a pristine wilderness that D. H. Lawrence said was perhaps ‘lovelier than any place created in language’. This novel, and the contemporaneous The Pathfinder, mark Cooper’s return to historical romance after more than a decade given largely to social and political commentary. Written during the period of Cooper’s bitter legal battles with the Whig press, The Deerslayer reflects a retreat from his difficulties into a world of romance; but the novel also symbolically attacks Cooper’s opponents and implicitly provides a critique of nineteenth-century American society. In the Introduction H. Daniel Peck offers an explanation for The Deerslayer’s mysterious power over twentieth-century readers, showing how the novel’s patterns of adventurous action dramatize issues of possession and loss. This edition provides the authoritative text of the novel.
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