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The Notebooks of Robert Frost by Robert Frost
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The Notebooks of Robert Frost

by Robert Frost

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283191,486 (5)None
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Belknap Press (2007), Hardcover, 848 pages

Member:fncll
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Tags:nonfiction, journals, poetry
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ed Robert Faggen
fncll | Jul 4, 2008 |  
Robert Frost described himself as a person who "needed room," and his "Notebooks" confirm that alongside the popular and folksy Robert Frost there lurked a more complicated literary artist, with a darker view of life.

Frost's darker view of the world was laced with ambiguities. His life journey became in part a search for "the room he needed," but perhaps he never understood exactly what he needed it for.
disembedded | May 22, 2007 |  
Review: The vigorous, meandering notebooks of Robert Frost Elizabeth Lund, Christian Science Monitor 3/6/07
choriamblibrary | Mar 13, 2007 |  
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0674023110, Hardcover)

Robert Frost is one of the most widely read, well loved, and misunderstood of modern writers. In his day, he was also an inveterate note-taker, penning thousands of intense aphoristic thoughts, observations, and meditations in small pocket pads and school theme books throughout his life. These notebooks, transcribed and presented here in their entirety for the first time, offer unprecedented insight into Frost's complex and often highly contradictory thinking about poetics, politics, education, psychology, science, and religion--his attitude toward Marxism, the New Deal, World War--as well as Yeats, Pound, Santayana, and William James. Covering a period from the late 1890s to early 1960s, the notebooks reveal the full range of the mind of one of America's greatest poets. Their depth and complexity convey the restless and probing quality of his thought, and show how the unruliness of chaotic modernity was always just beneath his appearance of supreme poetic control.

Edited by preeminent Frost scholar Robert Faggen and annotated to help readers with the poet's more elusive references, the notebooks are also thoroughly cross-referenced, marking thematic connections within these and Frost's other writings, including his poetry, letters, and other prose. This is a major new addition to the canon of Robert Frost's writings.

(20061120)

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:23 -0400)

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