The second installment of Harvard's critically acclaimed five-volume edition of Robert Frost's correspondence contains letters from 1920 to 1928, 400 of them gathered here for the first time. His 160 correspondents include family, friends, colleagues, fellow writers, visual artists, publishers, educators, librarians, farmers, and admirers.
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Praise for the previous volume:
"In almost every way, this new edition is a triumph of scholarly care... For all his private flaws, his tragedies large and small, American literature-and the language itself-owes a profound debt to that dark, demonic, beguiling figure, Robert Frost."
-William Logan, New York Times Book Review
"Long overdue, The Letters of Robert Frost, Volume 1: 1886-1920 is deservedly getting a lot of attention. Frost is not simply a lively correspondent, he is an artist of the epistolary form, defining himself and his poetic era in these pages... The truly original, splenetic, aphoristic, and revisionary mind of a major poet comes into view."
-Jay Parini, Chronicle of Higher Education
"Thanks to Harvard's undertaking, Frost's more complete, chronological letters help correct the poet's legacy by allowing it weight and breadth."
-Valerie Duff, Boston Globe
"Not the rustic sage, but the savvy, ambitious, cosmopolitan poet emerges from this first volume of Frost's lively, shrewd letters... [T]he collection [is] a must for scholars; but Frost's witty, urbane style make the letters an engaging browse for ordinary readers, too."
-Publishers Weekly
"It must be said that these early letters carry the burden of [Frost's] poetry so finely as to be no embarrassment to the poetry. The book has been edited...with continuous tact and sensitivity to the likely demands of a literate reader."
-David Bromwich, Times Literary Supplement
"Such a joy to read... This is the first time a complete version of [Frost's letters]-running in chronological order-has been made available... Anyone interested in the laborious process an artist must undertake to perfect his craft will read this book with awe and fascination, and as a constant source of inspiration."
-J. P. O'Malley, NPR online
"[T]his volume may well inspire a Frost renaissance."
-Kirkus Reviews
-- Reviews of The Letters of Robert Frost, Volume 1: 1886-1920
A temperamental streak beneath the cultivated persona of the humble, mild-mannered raconteur keeps things lively for the reader. This second installment in an impressive project tracks the transformation of the hardworking craftsman into a monument of American letters.
-- Publishers Weekly
Meticulously annotated...and provides fascinating insights into his philosophy, politics, and personality.
-- Glenn C. Altschuler Philadelphia Inquirer
This second of a proposed four-volume enterprise comprises 569 letters, two-thirds of which are published here for the first time. This book, like its predecessor-which covers 1886-1920-is a masterpiece of scholarly attention and an important adjunct to the poetry of an American master. Readers hear the poet's voice in his letters as clearly as in his lyrical, plain-spoken poetry. Frost's affections, his occupations and preoccupations, his political tendencies, and his aesthetic and moral sensibility are apparent in these letters to family, friends, and fellow poets...These years were also a rich period in Frost's life: he published four new collections and in 1924 received the first of his four Pulitzers. However, coinciding with success and national recognition were ongoing family health issues and personal tragedy.
-- B. Wallenstein Choice
Exemplary is a wholly inadequate word to characterize [this] joint editorial enterprise.
-- William H. Pritchard Hopkins Review
As one reads The Letters of Robert Frost: Volume Two-never tedious for all the chat and twice as entertaining for the clarity of the notes-poems are still finding him, and he is having some fun.
-- David Bromwich Times Literary Supplement
"In almost every way, this new edition is a triumph of scholarly care... For all his private flaws, his tragedies large and small, American literature-and the language itself-owes a profound debt to that dark, demonic, beguiling figure, Robert Frost."
-William Logan, New York Times Book Review
"Long overdue, The Letters of Robert Frost, Volume 1: 1886-1920 is deservedly getting a lot of attention. Frost is not simply a lively correspondent, he is an artist of the epistolary form, defining himself and his poetic era in these pages... The truly original, splenetic, aphoristic, and revisionary mind of a major poet comes into view."
-Jay Parini, Chronicle of Higher Education
"Thanks to Harvard's undertaking, Frost's more complete, chronological letters help correct the poet's legacy by allowing it weight and breadth."
-Valerie Duff, Boston Globe
"Not the rustic sage, but the savvy, ambitious, cosmopolitan poet emerges from this first volume of Frost's lively, shrewd letters... [T]he collection [is] a must for scholars; but Frost's witty, urbane style make the letters an engaging browse for ordinary readers, too."
-Publishers Weekly
"It must be said that these early letters carry the burden of [Frost's] poetry so finely as to be no embarrassment to the poetry. The book has been edited...with continuous tact and sensitivity to the likely demands of a literate reader."
-David Bromwich, Times Literary Supplement
"Such a joy to read... This is the first time a complete version of [Frost's letters]-running in chronological order-has been made available... Anyone interested in the laborious process an artist must undertake to perfect his craft will read this book with awe and fascination, and as a constant source of inspiration."
-J. P. O'Malley, NPR online
"[T]his volume may well inspire a Frost renaissance."
-Kirkus Reviews
-- Reviews of The Letters of Robert Frost, Volume 1: 1886-1920
A temperamental streak beneath the cultivated persona of the humble, mild-mannered raconteur keeps things lively for the reader. This second installment in an impressive project tracks the transformation of the hardworking craftsman into a monument of American letters.
-- Publishers Weekly
Meticulously annotated...and provides fascinating insights into his philosophy, politics, and personality.
-- Glenn C. Altschuler Philadelphia Inquirer
This second of a proposed four-volume enterprise comprises 569 letters, two-thirds of which are published here for the first time. This book, like its predecessor-which covers 1886-1920-is a masterpiece of scholarly attention and an important adjunct to the poetry of an American master. Readers hear the poet's voice in his letters as clearly as in his lyrical, plain-spoken poetry. Frost's affections, his occupations and preoccupations, his political tendencies, and his aesthetic and moral sensibility are apparent in these letters to family, friends, and fellow poets...These years were also a rich period in Frost's life: he published four new collections and in 1924 received the first of his four Pulitzers. However, coinciding with success and national recognition were ongoing family health issues and personal tragedy.
-- B. Wallenstein Choice
Exemplary is a wholly inadequate word to characterize [this] joint editorial enterprise.
-- William H. Pritchard Hopkins Review
As one reads The Letters of Robert Frost: Volume Two-never tedious for all the chat and twice as entertaining for the clarity of the notes-poems are still finding him, and he is having some fun.
-- David Bromwich Times Literary Supplement