Ship to Any Country Free at $50 • SHOP NOW
Conversations with Robert Frost: The Bread Loaf Period - Literary Insights & Poetry Discussions for Book Clubs, Students, and Frost Enthusiasts
$25.95
$47.19
Safe 45%
Conversations with Robert Frost: The Bread Loaf Period - Literary Insights & Poetry Discussions for Book Clubs, Students, and Frost Enthusiasts
Conversations with Robert Frost: The Bread Loaf Period - Literary Insights & Poetry Discussions for Book Clubs, Students, and Frost Enthusiasts
Conversations with Robert Frost: The Bread Loaf Period - Literary Insights & Poetry Discussions for Book Clubs, Students, and Frost Enthusiasts
$25.95
$47.19
45% Off
Quantity:
Delivery & Return: Free shipping on all orders over $50
Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
6 people viewing this product right now!
SKU: 64038414
Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa
apple pay
shop
Description
These core conversations between Peter Stanlis and Robert Frost occurred during 1939-1941. They are written in the much larger context of nearly a quarter century of friendship that ended only with the passing of Frost in 1963. These discussions provide a unique window of opportunity to appreciate the sources of Frost's philosophical visions, as well as his poetic interests. The discussions between Stanlis and Frost were held between six consecutive summers (1939-1944), when Stanlis was a student at the Bread Loaf Graduate School of English. These were augmented by additional exchanges at Bread Loaf in 1961-1962. These conversations provide original insights on important subjects common to both men.Frost insisted that it was impossible to make a complete or final unity out of the conflicts between spirit and matter. Ordinary empirical experience and rational discursive reason and logic could not harmonize basic conflicts. He held that the best method to ameliorate apparent contradictions in dualistic conflicts was through the "play" of metaphorical thinking and feeling. Metaphors included parables, allegories, fables, images, symbols, irony, and the forms and techniques of poetry such as rhyme, rhythm, assonance, dissonance, personifications, and connotations.These are the arsenal from which poets draw their insightful metaphors, but such metaphors are also the common property of every normal person. A poem is "a momentary stay against confusion," a form of revelation for "a clarification of life," but not a final, absolute answer to the mysteries and complexities in man's life on Earth. So too-at their best-are science, religion, philosophy, education, politics, and scholarship as a means of ameliorating human problems.
More
Shipping & Returns

For all orders exceeding a value of 100USD shipping is offered for free.

Returns will be accepted for up to 10 days of Customer’s receipt or tracking number on unworn items. You, as a Customer, are obliged to inform us via email before you return the item.

Otherwise, standard shipping charges apply. Check out our delivery Terms & Conditions for more details.

Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
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.

You Might Also Like

Top