


* WINNER of the Truman Capote Prize for Literary Criticism

* A New York Times Top Ten Book of the Year View the original review here: Heather Clark's Red Comet Is the Definitive Sylvia Plath Biography.Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the LA Times Book Prize in Biography Red Comet achieves the remarkable: It's a majestic tome with the narrative propulsion of a thriller.

"Plath does something akin to Picasso in his early Cubist drawings," Clark writes, ".a calculated, radical gesture born of impatience with a tradition that had run dry." Just two years before her death, Plath jettisoned worn-out forms for a bolder register, embracing internal rhyme, expressive line breaks, and autobiography: The circus animals of her imagination were liberated from their cages, pacing and stalking the masculinist canon. Clark also recasts Hughes as both muse and monster, a generous reader with a cruel streak.īut Red Comet is fundamentally a work of criticism, exploring the technical leaps in Ariel, the breakthrough collection that made Plath's name. Here, The Bell Jar is understood not as a teen cult work ("When we see a female character reading The Bell Jar in a movie, we know she will make trouble") but as a declaration of independence from postwar America. Suicide attempts take a backseat to fiercely focused genius. Rather, she was a highly disciplined craftswoman.whose innovative work gave new energy to the burgeoning literary and cultural revolutions of her time."įrom her youth in suburban Boston to her eminent academic accomplishments and stormy relationship with fellow poet Ted Hughes, Red Comet illuminates Plath's life in unprecedented detail. Red Comet, Heather Clark's heroic biography of Sylvia Plath, draws on a plethora of untapped archives and letters-and even a previously undiscovered novel-to resurrect Plath from "the limbo between icon and cliché " and conclude that "the most famous woman poet of the twentieth century was neither fragile ingé nue nor femme fatale.
