The Nobel-Prize-winning essayist and poet explores a variety of topics in burgeoning prose including the future of Europe, poets' lovers, the classic essay form, and the power of railway stations and landmarks to stir nostalgia and wanderlust.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brodsky on Frost,
By
This review is from: On Grief and Reason: Essays (Paperback)
I do not know whether I will be able to read the pieces in On Grief and Reason. I had read the title essay, which says that Frost is rough and goes through his "Home Burial," in the New Yorker, I think, and saved it, and it had deteriorated. I bought the book for the essay. It is that important, Brodsky is that important. It is the best single reading of a Frost poem that I have ever seen, but good-better-bests is not the issue. It is full of assumptions that everyone should have about what poetry is. It is how to read poetry. Stuart Filler
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