Sylvia Plath in Devon: A Year's Turning

Author(s): Elizabeth Sigmund and Gail Crowther 

ISBN: 9781781554371
Sale
-29%
$15.00 $21.00
A unique analysis of a crucial period in the life of this iconic writer, who tragically committed suicide just months later.




Trust Badge
Sylvia Plath in Devon: A Year's Turning is part memoir, part biography focusing on the fifteen months that Sylvia Plath lived in North Tawton, Devon from September 1961 to December 1962. This was an extraordinary time for Plath as she finished the proofs on her first novel "The Bell Jar" and in the autumn of 1962 produced most of her dazzling Ariel poems. Elizabeth Sigmund recalls the year of her friendship with Plath from their first meeting drinking tea to attending music concerts together. Gail Crowther considers the impact Plath's domestic life had on her creative work during this period drawing for the first time on unpublished letters, documents and previously unseen resources from a wide range of archives in the UK, US and Canada. What emerges is a unique and industrious picture of Plath as she settled into town life forging new friendships, giving birth to her second child, decorating her new home and producing some of the most memorable and powerful poetry of the 20th century.

BOOK ISBN 9781781554371
FORMAT 234 x 156 mm
BINDING Paperback
PAGES 128 pages
PUBLICATION DATE 15 December 2014
TERRITORY World
ILLUSTRATIONS 11 colour illustrations

 

 






Elizabeth Sigmund is co-ordinator of the Organophosphate Information Network and has been involved with the Working Party on Chemical and Biological Weapons since the mid-1960s. For this work she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Plymouth in 2001. She is author of Rage Against the Dying published by Pluto Press.

Gail Crowther was awarded her PhD from Lancaster University in 2010 for her thesis The Haunted Reader and Sylvia Plath. She has lectured in Sociology at Lancaster University and Social Science for the Open University. Her current research interests include archival studies and feminist life writing.



ALSO BY THE SAME AUTHOR