While Sylvia Plath's verse is peppered with allusions to the tempestuous domesticity of her marriage to Ted Hughes, he has retained his reputation. Beyond legal concerns, there are tricky factors to consider: the ambiguity of intimacy in general, the fragile and synergistic creativity of both poets, and the ultimate decision of the one who remained - Hughes - to destroy the last journal and correspondence of Plath, who didn't. The sum of it all has been the calcification of two camps: those who do not see Hughes's poetic genius as exculpating his behaviour, and the others who see it as exactly that.
Plath's letters probably won't harm Hughes's reputation | Rafia Zakaria | Books | The Guardian
- Poetry |
- Poets |
- Ted Hughes |
- Sylvia Plath
17 April 2017
Tags in Links Topics
Amazon
Authors
Bestselling authors
Book sales
Children's authors
Children's books
Children's publishing
Crime-writing
Crime fiction
Crime writer
e-books
Indie authors
Poems
Poetry
Poets
Prizes
Publishers
Publishing
Publishing houses
Publishing industry
Publishing world
Readers
Reading
Self-published writers
Self-publishers
Self-publishing
Writers
Writers' careers
Writers' craft
Writers' stories
Writing
Writing habits