From Publishers Weekly
"The best critical biography of Plath yet, poet Stevenson's volume offers a convincing reinterpretation of a complex and controversial life," lauded PW. "No longer cast as a victim of her husband's alleged infidelities, Plath emerges as the forger of her own fate." Photos.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
In her preface to this new biography of Sylvia Plath, Stevenson states that she intends to create "an objective account of how this exceptionally gifted girl was hurled into poetry by a combination of biographical accident and inflexible ideals and ambitions." Yet how can one be objective when one's aim is to explain "inflexible ideals and ambitions"? It is the very subjectivity that ultimately informs this book that is its weakest aspect. However, several previously unpublished memoirs by people who knew Plath are included as appendixes, and while they are not sufficient to make this a definitive biography (for which we will likely have to wait a number of years), they are interesting and make for a lively, if not altogether trustworthy, account of her life.
- Jessica Grim, NYPLCopyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.