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In a book that The New Yorker's Janet Malcolm called "by far the most intelligent and the only aesthetically satisfying" Plath biography, the poet Anne Stevenson narrates and illuminates the ways in which Sylvia Plath created her own legend in life and in poetry, one at odds with the posthumous myth that has grown up around her since her suicide in 1963.
"A vivid and, to me, moving portrait of a young woman who, carrying the full mixed cultural load of Americans born in 1932, as well as personal distresses and limitations peculiar to herself, (became) in ten driven years . . . the most ruthlessly original poet of her generation."--John Updike.
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Add Bitter fame, In a book that The New Yorker's Janet Malcolm called by far the most intelligent and the only aesthetically satisfying Plath biography, the poet Anne Stevenson narrates and illuminates the ways in which Sylvia Plath created her own legend in life and in, Bitter fame to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Bitter fame, In a book that The New Yorker's Janet Malcolm called by far the most intelligent and the only aesthetically satisfying Plath biography, the poet Anne Stevenson narrates and illuminates the ways in which Sylvia Plath created her own legend in life and in, Bitter fame to your collection on WonderClub |