I received four huge boxes of discarded books from a nearby town’s public library and have been sorting them, looking through them, and distributing them for two days. One book I’ve exercised my “First Dibs” privilege on is Fall of Frost by Brian Hall (pub. 2008). For this Lit major, it is definitely a “keeper.” Its dedication page is one of the most interesting ones I’ve read :
“In memory of Louis Alton Hall
physicist and father, who recited to me the first lines of Frost I ever heard
‘Home is the place where when you have to go there,
They have to let you in.’
and who kept hidden in his desk, where no one found it until after his death, a copy of Frost’s, “Revelation”
‘We make ourselves a place apart
Behind light words and tease and flour,
But, oh the agitated heart
Till someone find us really out.’ “

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