Mountain Interval
Robert Frost
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Originally published in 1916 and revised in 1920, Mountain Interval is Robert Frost's third collection of solo poetry. In it, Frost reflects on human tragedies and fears, expresses his reaction to the complexities of life, and ultimately accepts his own personal burdens. The collection prefaces itself with one of Frost's best known poems, "The Road Not Taken." - Summary by Mary Kay and Bartleby
Cast list for "Snow"
Narrator: Kristin Gjerløw
Mr. Cole: TriciaG
Mrs. Cole: Maria Kasper
Meserve: Ray Kasper
Edited by Maria Kasper (1 hr 26 min)
Chapters
To You | 0:53 | Read by Keith Louis |
The Road Not Taken | 1:34 | Read by Maria Kasper |
Christmas Trees | 3:34 | Read by Jack Albert |
An Old Man's Winter Night | 1:48 | Read by Phil Schempf |
A Patch of Old Snow | 0:36 | Read by Jude |
In the Home Stretch | 11:10 | Read by Maria Kasper |
The Telephone | 1:13 | Read by Keith Louis |
Meeting and Passing | 1:04 | Read by Keith Louis |
Hyla Brook | 1:16 | Read by Maria Kasper |
The Oven Bird | 1:10 | Read by Keith Louis |
Bond and Free | 1:27 | Read by Keith Louis |
Birches | 3:55 | Read by Maria Kasper |
Pea Brush | 1:30 | Read by Kathleen Moore |
Putting in the Seed | 1:10 | Read by Kathleen Moore |
A Time to Talk | 0:47 | Read by Kathleen Moore |
A Cow in Apple Time | 1:02 | Read by Keith Louis |
An Encounter | 1:33 | Read by Phil Schempf |
Range-Finding | 1:10 | Read by Keith Louis |
The Hill Wife | 4:01 | Read by Jacquelyn Bengfort |
The Bonfire | 7:00 | Read by Maria Kasper |
A Girl's Garden | 2:21 | Read by Keith Louis |
The Exposed Nest | 2:35 | Read by Maria Kasper |
"Out, Out-" | 2:16 | Read by TriciaG |
Brown's Descent or the Willy-Nilly Slide | 3:30 | Read by Phil Schempf |
The Gum-Gatherer | 2:05 | Read by Jack Albert |
The Line-Gang | 1:13 | Read by Maria Kasper |
The Vanishing Red | 1:54 | Read by TriciaG |
Snow | 21:13 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
The Sound of Trees | 1:35 | Read by Maria Kasper |
Reviews
A LibriVox Listener
The 20 minute reading of "snow" was absolutely atrocious