![]() | The Pathfinder Subjects: Bumppo Natty (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Ontario Lake (N.Y. and Ont.) -- Fiction; United States -- History -- French and Indian War 1754–1763 -- Fiction; Frontier and pioneer life -- Fiction; Indians of North America -- Fiction; In 1831, James Fenimore Cooper told his publisher that he wanted to write a story set on Lake Ontario. The book was accepted, but with no hint that it would feature Natty Bumppo from the well-established Leather-Stocking Tales. The Pathfinder (1840) revisits Natty's military service, extending a story begun in The Last of the Mohicans , and introduces the complications of love against the backdrop of the French and Indian War. Wayne Franklin's introduction describes the personal and financial circumstances that led to Cooper's resurrection of his most popular character, underscoring the author's aim to offer Natty as a "Pathfinder" for a nation he feared had lost its moral bearings. FranklinWayne: Wayne Franklin is Professor of English at the University of Connecticut. |
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