As an undergraduate student at Middlebury College, Peter J. Stanlis met and spent time with Robert Frost while attending the Bread Loaf Graduate School of English (named for Breadloaf Mountain, VT), 1939-41. This small book reprises his conversations with Frost, both private and public, presenting a philosophical and theological aspect of Frost's thought that is seldom recognized or acknowledged by critics (and upon which Stanlis expands in his "Robert Frost : The Poet as Philosopher" (ISI, 2007)). Stanlis describes his own coming to Middlebury and meeting Frost in the first chapter, and then devotes each of the other three chapters to one of his summers with Frost (the last/fourth chapter has a brief summary of their relationship after that. The conversations are v. nearly transcribed--as when Boswell wrote his "Life of Samuel Johnson", Stanlis would write down as much as he could remember after each one, including citations from poems that he and Frost had discussed and (of course) Frost's observations and insights. Anyone interested in Robert Frost or his poetry, or in poetry in general, will enjoy and appreciate having read this little book. I recommend it with great enthusiasm.