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Loading... Arielby Sylvia Plath
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Some great images, lush diction and metaphors, but, like Larkin, too obsessed with death, and too self-pitying at times to be truly perfect. "Lady Lazarus" enrages me, and I still like it a little, but really, you need to chill out, don't take yourself so goddamn seriously. ( )This woman's mad mind enthralls me. If asked to do a reading of her work, I wold always incdlude "Daddy," "Balloons," and "Cut.".There are few mad geniuses (geni?) and i have been in love with her prose since the 1960s. A wonderfully crafted collection of poems from a woman of immense literary gift. I too first read this at a young angsty moment in my life, whilst simultaneosly empathising with Holden Caufield, yet despite this these poems are beautifully haunting. They speak for themselves. Let them speak to you. This was one dark chick. I read this book in the summer of 1997 when everything in my life was up in the air and I wasn't sleeping more than an hour or two a night and I wasn't eating and all I was doing was reading. And I had my wisdom teeth removed that summer. Creepy creepy. no reviews | add a review
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As if these physical privations weren't enough, Plath was out in the cold in another sense--her husband, Ted Hughes, had left her for another woman earlier that year. Despite all this (or perhaps because of it), the Ariel poems dazzle with their lyricism, their surprising and vivid imagery, and their wit. Rather than confining herself to her bleak surroundings, Plath draws from a wide array of experience. In "Berck-Plage," for instance, clouds are "electrifyingly-coloured sherbets, scooped from the freeze." In "The Night Dances," the poet stands crib-side, reveling in her son's own brand of do-si-do: "Such pure leaps and spirals--Surely they travel / The world forever, I shall not entirely / Sit emptied of beauties, the gift / Of your small breath..."
Though at times they present the reader with hopelessness laid bare, these poems also teem with the brightest shards of a life, confounding those who merely look for the words of a gloomy, dispassionate suicide. Plath rose each morning in the final months of her life to "that still blue, almost eternal hour before the baby's cry" and left us these words like "axes/After whose stroke the wood rings..."
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)
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