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4 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brodsky's explanation of Frost's work is the best I've seen,
By A Customer
This review is from: Homage to Robert Frost (Hardcover)
If you need to read one critical examination of Robert Frost, buy this & read Joseph Brodsky's fantastic, accessible take on "Home Burial". What a great book this is--three fine poets examining a brilliant poet. But it is Brodsky who best holds to the Frost credo--he speaks clearly and plainly.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a wonderful companion to hearing Frost's seemingly off handed reading of his material,
By Pip "ppsm1" (Abbotsford, British Columbia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Homage to Robert Frost (Paperback)
This is a marvelous little book to be savoured at every chance and to be re-read as well. Its instructive for both the reader of poetry and the writer of poetry and every student of poetry should read this little masterpiece.It contains many insights and adds a much needed depth to the Frost that many may suspect is not there. Brodsky's erudite rendering of Frost as a student of Virgil makes me want to run back to Virgil and read other works by him besides the Aeneid and go to The Eclogues, also called Bucolics.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A glimpse into how poets read poets,
By A Customer
This review is from: Homage to Robert Frost (Paperback)
Brodsky, Heaney, and Walcott helped me hear the music of Frost's poetry. They don't analyze all that many poems but the insights they offer open the door to others. For example, I learned about Frost's idea of "Sentence-Sounds" in Brodsky's review of "Home Burial" and his idea of the "Sounds of Sense" in Heaney's discussion of "Desert Places". Then when I read Frost's "To a Thinker", which does not appear in "Homage to Frost", I came across the line "...From sound to sense and back to sound", and of course I recognized a familiar theme. If you like Frost, this book makes a nice companion reader.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fitting Homage,
This review is from: Homage to Robert Frost (Paperback)
Poet Robert Frost (1874 - 1963), known for his use of colloquial American speech and rural settings, won four Pulitzer Prizes, among many other honors and recognitions. By the time I was in junior high and high school, his poetry was in all the American literature textbooks; he'd been published since 1914 and I assumed he had always been well known.
What I didn't know was that to took World War II to make his work known to the general public. In Homage to Robert Frost by Joseph Brodsky, Seamus Heaney and Derek Walcott, Brodsky tells us that in 1943, the U.S. War Council distributed - as a morale builder - 50,000 copies of Frost's "Come In, And other Poems" to U.S. troops stationed overseas. That thought is rather staggering - a book of poetry distributed to troops as a morale builder. Brodsky, Heaney and Walcott all received the Nobel Prize for literature, which Frost never did. All three were born outside the United States; Frost was the quintessential New Englander. And in this collection of essays, each pays homage to a poet who enormously influenced them and their poet generations. In his essay, taken from a seminar he taught in Paris, Brodsky explicates two Frost poems - "Come In" (the title poem from that World War II collection) and "Home Burial," which may have been based upon the death (from cholera) of Frost's firstborn child. Brodsky takes a journey through both poems, weaving a narrative that is both deep and suspenseful. Heaney discusses "Home Burial" in less detail, but also covers "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" (known to generations of schoolchildren, including me), "Birches," "Desert Places" and several others. He focuses on the sounds of Frost's poetry, their "bracing lyric power." Walcott also discusses "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" but goes beyond a simple discussion and explication, considering Frost an autocratic rather than democratic poet and looking at the "scars of devastation" from Frost's personal life and how it affected his poetry. The three essays were not written for the purpose of a volume of homage to Frost; Brodsky's was written for The New Yorker in 1994; Heaney's for Salmagundi in 1989; and Walcott's for The New Republic in 1995. The three were assembled and published by Farrar Straus & Giroux in 1996. To have three Nobel Prize winners recognize the value and importance of a poet's work is homage indeed. |
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Homage to Robert Frost by Joseph Brodsky (Paperback - September 30, 1997)
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