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The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath by…
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The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath (original 2000; edition 2000)

by Sylvia Plath, Karen V. Kukil (Editor)

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1,555114,329 (4.13)28
Member:dyingisanart
Title:The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath
Authors:Sylvia Plath
Other authors:Karen V. Kukil (Editor)
Info:Anchor (2000), Edition: Unabridged, Paperback, 768 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:writer, depression, mental illness, bipolar disorder, poetry

Work details

The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath by Sylvia Plath (2000)

  1. 10
    The Journals of Sylvia Plath by Sylvia Plath (susanbooks)
    susanbooks: It's interesting to compare the abridged & unabridged editions to see what Ted Hughes left out of his version. The unabridged edition gives a much more ocmplete, rounded portrait of Plath.
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Showing 1-5 of 11 (next | show all)
I've been wanting this for years, since college. I still don't have it :(
  purplehena | Mar 31, 2013 |
I feel like an intruder reading this.

Incredibly vast and intricate, even her ordinary accounts of days are almost as eloquent and forceful as her poetry. ( )
  HadriantheBlind | Mar 30, 2013 |
Boring. Couldn't cut it. Too juvenile for me. ( )
  MSarki | Mar 29, 2013 |
The poor darling. She was so talented, lovely, and thoughtful, and the idea of her death, the means of which she killed herself, is so terrible to consider. Her desperation and the hopelessness that seized her is beyond comprehension. Why would someone so intelligent, who could write so clearly and beautifully, die in what some would consider such a demeaning way.

Reading this was a real treat, but you feel the void, knowing that her life ended in this macabre, almost seedy fashion. She was an angel. Such a waste. ( )
  quillmenow | Oct 29, 2012 |
Most people like to focus on how she was such troubled soul. The fact is most writers/poets/artists are but their internal world is rarely made public in a literary format. I read this book when I was 16 years old and have reread it many times since then. It's one of those treasured tattered books in my personal library. I discover new things every time i revist her journals which is why i like revisting her work. She was a truly gifted writer. Her journals are lyrical, intimate, sometimes beautifully verbose. You grow to love her, admire her, sometimes cringe at how nasty she can be. But she is by far a one of my favorite writers. Her journals are raw and inspiring. They have offered me motivation while dealing with writer's block. Her whole universe can be very inspiring to a creative mind. There is no happy ending of course. But she loved what she did and that was to write, to express herself, to live a poets life. That is all that should matter. ( )
  ariastetae | Feb 2, 2012 |
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July 1950-- I may never be happy, but tonight I am content. Nothing more than an empty house, the warm hazy weariness from a day spent setting strawberry runners in the sun, a glass of cool sweet milk, and a shallow dish of blueberries bathed in cream. Now I know how people can life without books, without college. When one is so tired at the end of the day one must sleep, and at the next dawn there are more strawberry runners to set, and so one goes on living, near the earth. At times like this I'd call myself a fool to ask for more...
I may never be happy, but tonight I am content.
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Do not combine The Journals of Sylvia Plath with the Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath. The original Journals of Sylvia Plath were heavily edited by her husband, Ted Hughes. The Unabridged version presents nearly 400 pages of additional material, making these very different works.
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This disambiguation is made more difficult, because the British edition of the Unabridged Journals (ISBN 0571197043) is titled Journals of Sylvia Plath, so a number of unabridged copies continue to be combined incorrectly.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0385720254, Paperback)

In the decades that have followed Sylvia Plath's suicide in February 1963, much has been written and speculated about her life, most particularly about her marriage to fellow poet Ted Hughes and her last months spent writing the stark, confessional poems that were to become Ariel. And the myths surrounding Plath have only been intensified by the strong grip her estate--managed by Hughes and his sister, Olwyn--had over the release of her work. Yet Plath kept journals from the age of 11 until her death at 30. Previously only available in a severely bowdlerized edition, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath have now been scrupulously transcribed (with every spelling mistake and grammatical error left intact) and annotated by Karen V. Kukil, supervisor of the Plath collection at Smith College.

The journals show the breathless adolescent obsessed with her burgeoning sexuality, the serious university student competing for the highest grades while engaging in the human merry-go-round of 1950s dating, the graduate year spent at Cambridge University where Plath encountered Ted Hughes. Her version of their relationship (dating is definitely not the appropriate term) is a necessary, and deeply painful, complement to Birthday Letters. On March 10, 1956, Plath writes:

Please let him come, and give me the resilience & guts to make him respect me, be interested, and not to throw myself at him with loudness or hysterical yelling; calmly, gently, easy baby easy. He is probably strutting the backs among crocuses now with seven Scandinavian mistresses. And I sit, spiderlike, waiting, here, home; Penelope weaving webs of Webster, turning spindles of Tourneur. Oh, he is here; my black marauder; oh hungry hungry. I am so hungry for a big smashing creative burgeoning burdened love: I am here; I wait; and he plays on the banks of the river Cam like a casual faun.
Plath's documentation of the two years the couple spent in the U.S. teaching and writing explicitly highlights the dilemma of the late-1950s woman--still swaddled in expectations of domesticity, yet attempting to forge her own independent professional and personal life. This period also reveals in detail the therapy sessions in which Plath lets loose her antipathy for her mother and her grief at her father's death when she was 8--a contrast to the bright, all-American persona she presented to her mother in the correspondence that was published as Letters Home. The journals also feature some notable omissions. Plath understandably skirted over her breakdown and attempted suicide during the summer of 1953, though she was to anatomize the events minutely in her novel The Bell Jar.

Fragments of diaries exist after 1959, which saw the couple's return to England and rural retreat in Devon, the birth of their two children, and their separation in late 1962. An extended piece on the illness and death of an elderly neighbor during this period is particularly affecting and was later turned into the poem "Berck-Plage." Much has been made of the "lost diaries" that Plath kept until her suicide--one simply appears to have vanished, the other Hughes burned after her death. It would seem rapacious to wish for more details of her despair in her final days, however. It is crystallized in the poems that became Ariel, and this is what the voice of her journals ultimately send the reader back to. Sylvia Plath's life has for too long been obfuscated by anecdote, distorting her major contribution to 20th-century literature. As she wrote in "Kindness": "The blood jet is poetry. There is no stopping it." --Catherine Taylor

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:56:02 -0500)

(see all 2 descriptions)

Presents the complete journals of twentieth-century American author Sylvia Plath, from 1950 to 1962, transcribed from her original manuscripts.

(summary from another edition)

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