Frances Frost


Frances Mary Frost was an American poet, novelist, and children's writer. She was the mother of poet Paul Blackburn.

Career

John C. Farrar, then-editor of The Bookman and a fellow Vermont native, accepted Frost's poem "Memory" in 1927 while she was still a junior at Middlebury College; it was the first of her poems to see professional publication. Moving to Burlington, Vermont that same year, she worked as an editor for the Burlington Daily News, taught courses in poetry at the University of Vermont, and authored several collections of poetry—including Hemlock Wall, for which she received the Yale Younger Poets Award.
From 1931 to 1937 Frost was a summer resident at MacDowell, where she worked on further poetry collections including These Acres. During this period she served as the editor of the brief-lived American Poetry Journal.
Frost's poetry was widely-published in her lifetime, appearing in The New York Herald Tribune, The Atlantic, Virginia Quarterly, The Saturday Evening Post, Good Housekeeping, Ladies' Home Journal, The New Yorker, Harper's, and Saturday Review, among others. She saw eleven poetry collections published, as well as five novels and numerous children's books.

Personal life

Frost was born in St. Albans, Vermont. She attended Middlebury College from 1923 to 1926 and graduated from the University of Vermont in 1931, earning a Bachelor of Philosophy. At Middlebury she joined Delta Delta Delta.
She married William Gordon Blackburn of St. Albans on April 4, 1926, later filing for divorce in 1931. They had two children, Paul Blackburn (U.S. poet) and Sister Marguerite Blackburn. She married Samuel Gaillard Stoney of Charleston, South Carolina, another resident of MacDowell, on September 18, 1933, whom she would also later divorce. By 1941 she had moved to Greenwich Village in New York City where she lived with her son as well as Noreen Carr Grace, her lover. After Frost's death to cancer in 1959, N. Carr Grace was the executrix of her estate with co-executor Paul Blackburn.
Her papers are held at University of California, San Diego, and Yale University.

Awards

Works

Poetry

Hemlock Wall ; Yale Series of Younger Poets reprint, 1971Blue Harvest These Acres Woman of this Earth Road to America Mid-Century, Song For April Found in an old scrapbook in 2020
  • ''This Rowdy Heart''

Fiction

Innocent Summer Yoke of Stars Uncle Snowball Kate Trimingham
  • ''Village of Glass''

Children's poetry

Pool in the Meadow: Poems for Young and Old Christmas in the Woods, illustrated by Aldren A. Watson Christmas is Shaped Like Stars, illus. Garry MacKenzie The Little Whistler, illus. Roger Duvoisin The Little Naturalist, illus. Kurt Werth

Children's fiction

Then Came Timothy, illus. Richard Bennett The Cat that Went to College, illus. Morgan Dennis Little Fox, illus. Morgan Dennis Amahl and the Night Visitors, illus. Duvoisin — narrative adaptation of the 1951 Christmas opera by Gian Carlo MenottiRocket Away!, illus. Paul Galdone, foreword by Robert R. Coles, Chairman of the Hayden PlanetariumStar of Wonder, illus. Galdone, by Frost and Robert R. ColesThe Little Donkey, illus. Oleg Zinger — translated from the work of Oleg Zinger and Ilse Windmuller

The ''Windy Foot'' series

Windy Foot at the County Fair, illus. Lee Townsend Sleigh Bells for Windy Foot, illus. Townsend Maple Sugar for Windy Foot, illus. Townsend Fireworks for Windy Foot, illus. Townsend

As editor

American Poetry Journal