'I rise with my red hair / And I eat men like air.'
It is sixty years since Ariel was first published. The poems were written in an extraordinary burst of creativity just before Sylvia Plath's death in 1963, and they went on to establish her reputation as one of the most original and gifted poets of the twentieth century.
The critic Al Alvarez, reviewing the collection in the Observer, wrote: 'If the poems are despairing, vengeful and destructive, they are at the same time tender, open to things, and also unusually clever, sardonic, hardminded . . . They are works of great artistic purity and, despite all the nihilism, great generosity . . . the book is a major literary event.'
The poet Emily Berry offers an introduction that gives readers, old and new, a way into the poems, and demonstrates Plath's profound and enduring influence down the generations.
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Maße
Höhe: 192 mm
Breite: 126 mm
Dicke: 10 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-571-39477-7 (9780571394777)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Sylvia Plath was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1932. She graduated from Smith College in 1955 and went on a Fulbright scholarship to Cambridge University, where she met and later married Ted Hughes. In her lifetime she published one novel, The Bell Jar (1963), and one volume of poetry, The Colossus (1960).