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On Frost and Eliot
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13 May 2025

Named a 2025 Outstanding Academic Title by the American Library Association's Choice Reviews
Robert Frost and T.S. Eliot have received ample attention as major American poets of the last century. But they have usually been considered apart from one another, the homely all-American Frost assumed to have little in common with the sophisticated made-over English Eliot.
William Pritchard's interest is to see what emerges if we juxtapose the two poets and consider their respective poetic careers as quasi-friendly rivals, in technique, in historical weight, and in relation to other twentieth century poets, predominantly English and American ones. They took the occasion more than once to poke fun at the odd poems the other had produced, although they were mutually admiring as they aged. Pritchard's treatment of the pair takes its cue from Frost's distinction between them: "I play Euchre; he plays Eucharist." On Frost and Eliot explores the appropriateness of such a distinction.
PRAISE FOR WILLIAM H. PRITCHARD AND HIS EARLIER BOOKS:
"These pieces reflect Pritchard’s abiding joy in literature, especially poetry . . . Pritchard is demanding, fastidious, and occasionally cantankerous, yet in a refreshing way that reminds readers what it means to care deeply about literature."
—Booklist on Ear Training
"What shines through here is Pritchard's passionate commitment to literature and writing in an impoverished academic world. This is a clear-minded and judicious tale of one critic's quest to situate his critical identity in a world that has largely left his kind behind."
—Library Journal on English Papers: A Teaching Life
"A savvy literary critic . . . Pritchard writes with both uncommon clarity and easygoing erudition."
—Publishers Weekly on Updike: America's Man of Letters
"Pritchard's sympathetic, kinetic engagement with the canon has always distinguished him from other voices of the academy. Maybe that's because Pritchard believes less in great books than in great writing. His immersion in literature is emotional and philosophical, as well as technical and professional."
—Kirkus Reviews on Talking Back to Emily Dickinson, and Other Essays
Introduction
Part I: Frost
1. The Designs of Robert Frost
2. Frost Departmentalized
3. Frost Revised
4. Robert Frost Collected Poems, Prose, and Plays
5. The Notebooks of Robert Frost
6. The Flip Side of Frost
7. Frost In His Letters
8. Frost Letters, vol 2
9. Robert Frost Letters v. 3
10. A Witness Tree and Frost’s Biography
11. West of Boston: Robert Frost
12. Frost and Edward Thomas
13. Frost’s Mischievous Grip 120
Part II: Eliot
1. T. S. Eliot: A Revaluation
2. Epistolary Eliot
3. T.S. Eliot as Critic and Editor
4. Prufrock Centennial
5. Poet in his Youth
6. The Letters of T.S. Eliot Vol 3
7. The Letters of T.S. Eliot Vol. 6
8. The Prose Eliot
9. T.S. Eliot Prose Letters
10. Eliot’s Mischievous Prose
11. T.S. Eliot Complete Poems
12. Eliot’s Last Prose
13. Letters Eliot Vol 9