Aaron Sachs is professor of history and American studies at Cornell University. He is the author of The Humboldt Current: Nineteenth-Century Exploration and the Roots of American Environmentalism and Arcadian America: The Death and Life of an Environmental Tradition.
An incisive homage to the continuing relevance of two towering writers. . . . A well-informed, thoughtful dual biography. * Kirkus Reviews, starred review * Excellent. . . . a braided account of Melville and Mumford, aimed at exploring the strange resonance between their times and ours. ---Daniel Immerwahr, Slate Up From the Depths takes up the dialectic method so central to Melville's writing for its unique investigation of parallel lives. . . . Fittingly, Mr. Sachs's chapters interweave periods of the two men's lives, creating a dappled effect of shared shadows and light. Certain biographical overlaps are particularly striking. ---Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal Fascinating. . . . In shining a light on Mumford's efforts during the 'Melville Revival' of the mid-1900s, Sachs makes a strong case for the rediscovery of Mumford's own writing. . . . A well-executed literary history. * Publishers Weekly * An inspired study of [Melville and Mumford], juxtaposing their lives and works in alternating chapters. . . . What draws Sachs to [these writers] is the dialectic in each between continuity and disruption, confidence and despair. ---Steven G. Kellman, American Scholar Mr. Sachs has written a sort of palimpsest of biography itself, showing how, generation by generation, we begin to see through the traffic between past and present that leads to the rediscovery of figures like Melville and Mumford, who wanted for themselves and their progeny (which includes us) a recognition that going backward can also be a way of going forward. ---Carl Rollyson, New York Sun Sachs manages a set of impressive balancing acts: matching scholarly diligence with fluent, stylish prose; admiration for his subjects with an alertness to their flaws. Up from the Depths packs multiple books into one: an introduction to Mumford's thought, an innovative study of Melville, and a history of the modern age through the eyes of two uniquely perceptive writers. ---Madoc Cairns, Observer