Some heavy reading on the ecological and climate emergency leads C-ic, a forty-something painter living in Paris, to question his life choices. In a state of vulnerability, racked with eco-anxiety, he is contacted by the spirit of Henry David Thoreau: writer, environmentalist and the author of Walden. Two centuries separate C-ic from the author who, depressed by the narrow materialism of industrialised America, retreated to a single-room cabin in the woods by Walden Pond. But as their Socratic dialogue continues, C-ic notices striking parallels between the suffocating commercialism of mid-19th-century America and the unsustainable, alienating, tech-driven consumerism of today. Both societies are shaped by a single priority - economic growth - that not only squanders the earth-s resources but separates human beings from nature. Inspired by Thoreau-s return to nature, C-ic begins dreaming of his own retreat from urban life: his own self-sufficient cabin in the woods. In Thoreau and Me, C