Contains a literary discussion on the wilderness literature influenced by closures of frontiers around the globe by the end of the nineteenth century. With the closing of the frontiers to further settlement has also come a new recognition of the power of nature and the need to seek accommodation rather than domination. This has led to a literature which seeks to produce a culture based on a relationship of partnership between humans and nature, and which looks at wilderness not as a resource to exploit but as a place where we can return to the natural sources of our human cultures and conscious existence. McLaren hereby encloses two wilderness narratives: Norman Maclean’s A River Runs Through It, and James McQueen’s Hook’s Mountain.