Published some 15 years after the groundbreaking Beyond Nature Writing: Expanding the Boundaries of Ecocriticism, ed. by Karla Armbruster and Kathleen Wallace—which examined several genres of writing produced over nearly three millennia—the present volume homes in on prose and poetry of the US's long 19th century. During this period, the 11 essayists remind readers, the US was expanding geographically even as it focused back on itself to shape and claim a national identity; these tensions between outward and inward overlapped with tensions between nature and culture. These essays address authors whose struggles with these tensions were overt (Thoreau, Susan Fenimore Cooper, Audubon, Muir), along with authors not generally considered nature writers (Emily Dickinson, Margaret Fuller). One of the refreshing messages that weaves through this collection should not be startling, but is: when writers like Hawthorne and Melville set a character in nature, the landscape should be read as landscape rather than as psychology or symbol. Whereas many analyses of prose suffer from unreadable jargon, these essays—particularly Christopher Sloman’s on Charles Brockden Brown and Li-Ru Lu’s on Audubon—are a pleasure to read. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers