From "Robert Frost Reads", Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening and After Apple-Picking
Born in San Francisco in 1874, Robert Frost is considered one of America’s leading poets of the 20th century. Essentially, Frost is thought of as a pastoral poet whose work closely reflects the scenery and life of rural New England. He is noted for his ability to join this pastoral imagery with philosophical themes to create strong lyrical poems.
Over the years, Frost received an unprecedented number of literary, academic, and public honors including the Pulitzer Prize, which he was awarded four times. Frost’s poetic and political conservatism did cause him to lose favor with some literary critics, however, in the end his reputation as a major American poet has remained secure. Frost died in Boston in 1963.
Listen to these poems from “Robert Frost Reads” courtesy of HarperAudio.
A passport to utopia
“The Fault in Our Stars” and “There Is No Dog”: Not kids’ stuff
Ricky Gervais: My conscience never takes a day off
Lessons of a very sexy pirate costume
America’s failed promise of equal opportunity
Is gay literature over?
A voice that touched us all
Whitney Houston dies at 48
Didn’t she almost have it all?
Porn’s taboo transsexual stars 

