Eyewitness account of Frost's 1962 visit to the Soviet Union At the height of the Cold War in 1962, the most American of poets travels to the Soviet Union to have it out with Premier Nikita... This description may be from another edition of this product.
A beautiful little book about Frost's apparently well documented journey to Russia in the early 60s (I only vaguely recall it), his important visits with Yevtushenko (who proves himself to be as usual preoccupied with Yevtushenko - brilliant and notoriously sidetracked) and the great Anna Akhmatova (the dangerously vital witness to the worst of Soviet abuse of its artists), and finally his over-arching visit with Krushchev. The book is compact and to the point, much like Frost's poems. A bit of Frost's personal hesitancy comes through, though we find it but precedes his customary plain-spoken triumph in Russia, as in America, once he begins to feel comfortable - a requisite luxury that remained important to Frost throughout his life. Strongly written by someone who was there, it's a gem of a book for anyone interested in Robert Frost's conception of America and her artists, revealing a robustly innocent kind of faith one unfortunately finds nowhere nowadays.
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