Fall of Frost, Brian Hall
Fall of Frost, Brian Hall
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Fall of Frost

Author: Brian Hall

Narrator: Dick Hill

Unabridged: 12 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 05/19/2008


Synopsis

In his most recent novel, I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company, Brian Hall won acclaim for the way he used the intimate, revelatory voice of fiction to capture the half-hidden personal stories of the Lewis and Clark expedition. In his new novel, Hall turns to the life of Robert Frost, arguably America's most well-known poet. Frost, as both a man and an artist, was toughened by a hard life. His own father died when Frost was eleven; his only sibling, a sister, had to be institutionalized; and of his five children, one died before the age of four, one committed suicide, one went insane, and one died in childbirth.

Told in short chapters, each of which presents an emblematic incident with intensity and immediacy, Hall's novel deftly weaves together the earlier parts of Frost's life with his final year, 1962, when, at age eighty-eight and under the looming threat of the Cuban Missile Crisis, he made a visit to Russia and met with Nikita Khrushchev.

As Hall shows, Frost determined early on that he would not succumb to the tragedies life threw at him. The deaths of his children were forms of his own death from which he resurrected himself through poetry—for him, the preeminent symbol of man's form-giving power.

A searing, exquisitely constructed portrait of one man's rages, guilt, paranoia, and sheer, defiant persistence, as well as an exploration of why good people suffer unjustly and how art is born from that unanswerable question, Fall of Frost is a magnificent work that further confirms Hall's status as one of the most talented novelists at work today.

About Brian Hall

Brian Hall is the author of the novels Madeleine's World, The Saskiad, and the acclaimed story of the Lewis and Clark expedition, I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company, as well as three books of nonfiction. His journalism has appeared in Time, the New Yorker, and the New York Times Magazine.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Dale on July 26, 2018

This is what I would call a prismatic, novelized biography of Robert Frost. As with Brian Hall's earlier work, "I Should Be Extremely Happy in Your Company" (which I loved, and which is amazing), this is told in a fractured way, and assumes some familiarity with Frost's life and work. Without it, yo......more

Goodreads review by Amanda on May 02, 2010

I was lost almost the whole time plot-wise but between Frost's language and Hall's it hardly mattered.......more

Goodreads review by Joel on February 06, 2020

Made it about 25 pages and had to give up. If I'm going to read a book predominantly in 2nd person, it needs to be a Choose Your Own Adventure.......more

Goodreads review by Pat on March 09, 2025

The style of this novel is rather off putting, broken as it is into many short chapters and describing segments of Frost's life over many decades, in apparently random order. But in totality, as you lean in to the beautiful wordsmanship that Hall demonstrates and as you allow the poignance of Frost'......more

Goodreads review by H.L. on October 25, 2020

I have one Robert Frost poem that I like and must admit that I don't read poetry or pursue it in any way. Still, the novel sounded good when I read the synopsis. Now that I've finished Brian Hall's book, I'm left wondering if he intended to make Frost sound as miserable as the poet came across in th......more