Robert Francis

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advocacy for mindful attention and retreat
American nature writing rediscovered
Amherst Massachusetts literary heritage
and mindful living
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celebrating the unimportant and small
conservation over consumerism themes
environmental consciousness in essays
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forests
Fort Juniper and contemplative living
forthcoming
literary essays connecting self and world
literary kin to Thoreau and Berry
meditation on rural American life
meditative woodland and apple harvest essays
nature observations and contemplative prose
neglected poets of New England
overlooked voices in nature literature
philosophical essays on solitude
poetic essays on autumn landscapes
priorities of simplicity and attention
prose in the Christian Science Monitor
psychological impact of industrialization
quiet radicalism in American prose
reflections on modernization and nature
resisting social and economic upheaval
Robert Francis collected essays
Robert Frost and literary recognition
seasons
simplicity and solitude in modern life
slow living versus technological haste
spiritual nourishment from everyday life
the rewards of small moments in writing
Traveling in Concord unpublished treatise

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349675
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Rediscovering the quietly radical writing of a poet who chose simplicity, solitude, and contemplation over modern haste

American author Robert Francis, whom Robert Frost called "the best neglected poet," lived in Amherst, Massachusetts from the 1920s to the 1980s. As an underappreciated but prolific poet, Francis authored eight poetry collections and received a number of prestigious prizes. Still, like many poets committed to their craft, he lived most of his quiet life at or well below the poverty level. To sustain himself financially, Francis turned to essay writing in popular magazines, such as the Christian Science Monitor and Forum. From 1938 to 1953, as America and the world experienced a period of intense modernization, he produced an invigorating, challenging, and enlightening quantity of prose whose quality should rank him alongside writers such as Emerson, Thoreau, Wendell Berry, and Annie Dillard.

Published in one volume for the first time, Robert Francis: Collected Prose invites readers to a retrospective retreat into the solitude and serenity of Francis's cabin, Fort Juniper, where he ardently and artfully dueled the most psychologically, socially, and economically destructive aspects of industrialized America. These essays, together with selections from Francis's previously unpublished nature treatise, Traveling in Concord, offer an avenue toward an enhanced understanding of many commonly overlooked aspects of the natural world, offering 21st-century readers a refreshing reorientation of worldviews, advocating life principles of simplicity over unnecessary technological complexity, and conservation over consumerism. Vibrant, jubilant, at times sardonic and brooding but always absorbing, Francis's essays draw readers into the meditative mood of his woodland walks, apple harvests, and autumn landscapes to discover, as he writes, "the importance of the unimportant, the virtue of the small, the rewards of intense cultivation."

Matthew J. Babcock is the author of Private Fire: The Ecopoetry and Prose of Robert Francis, and his scholarship has appeared in Journal of Ecocriticism, Teaching in Higher Education, and The Explicator. He teaches at Brigham Young University-Idaho. He is also a Pushcart Prize-nominated creative writer. Along with his own books, his literary work has appeared in anthologies as well as many literary journals.