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The Collected Poems by Sylvia Plath
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The Collected Poems

by Sylvia Plath

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What else can be said about this poor woman that hasn't been said before ad nauseum? Her poetry continues to speak volumes on its own. Gorgeous, life-shattering work. As is the cliche, I read her first in my melancholy teens, but she has echoed within me ever since. She is the reason I still read and love poetry, the reason I know that poetry can transform you. ( )
  RachelWeaver | Nov 23, 2009 |
What else can be said about this poor woman that hasn't been said before ad nauseum? Her poetry continues to speak volumes on its own. Gorgeous, life-shattering work. As is the cliche, I read her first in my melancholy teens, but she has echoed within me ever since. She is the reason I still read and love poetry, the reason I know that poetry can transform you. ( )
  RachelWeaver | Nov 20, 2009 |
Spell-binding, iron-hard rage vies with razor sharp wit ( )
  ThistleDo | Jun 14, 2009 |
Wonderful. One of my favorite authors.
  readernerdfighter721 | Jul 10, 2007 |
“Love is a shadow.
How you lie and cry after it
Listen: these are its hooves: it has gone off, like a horse.”

This is Plath’s poetry. Sad, depressing & heart wrenching.
If you are not in are in the middle of a tragic love affair or on the verge of breaking up; or if you are a sensitive soul, prone to being sucked in to a depressive literary spiral, stay away! Otherwise, wallow and weep, and come away knowing your life is better. ( )
  basiltherat | Jul 8, 2007 |
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My thoughts are crabbed and sallow, My tears like vinegar, Or the bitter blinking yellow Of an acetic star
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0060909005, Paperback)

Sylvia Plath died in 1963, and even now her outsize persona threatens to bury her poetry--the numerous biographies and studies often drawing the reader toward anecdote and away from the work. It's a relief to turn to the poems themselves and once more be jolted by their strange beauty, hard-wrought originality, and acetylene anger. "It is a heart, / This holocaust I walk in, / O golden child the world will kill and eat." While the juvenilia and poems written before 1960 that Ted Hughes has included here prefigure Plath's later obsessions, they also enable us to witness her turn from thesaurus-heavy verse to stripped-down art as they gather power through raw simplicity. "The blood jet is poetry. / There is no stopping it," she declares in "Kindness."

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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Legacy Library: Sylvia Plath

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