Monstrous myths that have hijacked Sylvia Plath's life
The Independent|August 21, 2024
The latest book on the poet casts her in a world of repressed domestic violence at the hands of husband Ted Hughes. It's a familiar tale that does her a disservice
Robert McCrum
Monstrous myths that have hijacked Sylvia Plath's life

It was Boris Pasternak, author of Dr Zhivago, who sounded a sombre warning about what happens in the terrible event of someone taking their own life: “We have no conception of the inner torture which precedes suicide.”

And in this latest book on Sylvia Plath, we have an original tale full of attitude whose origins must be traced to one of the most notorious suicides of all. More challenging and complex still, on top of a classic enigma, we have a new take on an old story of a tragic love affair that continues to torment writers and readers in equal measure, from the bright revolutionary skies of east coast America to the back-ways of Hampstead Heath or Primrose Hill.

What began as a bitter marital breakdown has, over time, become a monster of myth and counter-myth that haunts every new generation.

It is a story that first took root in Camden Town, that leafy, yet grey, part of London known to Dickens. In the autumn of 1962, an expat American poet and novelist and mother of two, recently separated from her partner, a celebrated English poet, moved into the second-floor flat of a house previously occupied by WB Yeats.

A place whose associations seemed pre-ordained, it was here that the 30-year-old began to write as she’d never done before, in a fever of self-awakening. We now know that both she and her estranged husband, Ted Hughes, were in the antechamber of greatness. He had found his voice, and been acclaimed for it, with The Hawk in the Rain. She, having taken the rooms in Fitzroy Road, was “living like a Spartan”, to complete the Ariel poems that would also make her famous, composing new work in the cold blue dawn, gripped by the belief that she must write “to free myself from the past”.

This story is from the August 21, 2024 edition of The Independent.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the August 21, 2024 edition of The Independent.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM THE INDEPENDENTView All
'I didn't think I'd make it'
The Independent

'I didn't think I'd make it'

Adam Smith, the commentator with a voice synonymous with boxing’, tells Alex Pattle about his enforced absence from the sport and his agonising battle with cancer

time-read
7 mins  |
September 12, 2024
England charge back after early Australian fireworks
The Independent

England charge back after early Australian fireworks

England weathered some early fireworks from Travis Head to restrict Australia to 179 in their series-opening T20 against Australia.

time-read
2 mins  |
September 12, 2024
Reeves must cut the gloom to return the UK to growth
The Independent

Reeves must cut the gloom to return the UK to growth

Not many people are inclined to feel much sympathy for Rachel Reeves at the moment the cut to winter fuel payments could hardly have gone down worse but she’s been dealt a dismal hand. And now the economy has stalled on her.

time-read
3 mins  |
September 12, 2024
Stones opens up on Euros hurt and Harry's hundred.
The Independent

Stones opens up on Euros hurt and Harry's hundred.

Defender eyes century of caps as young Lions add energy’

time-read
3 mins  |
September 12, 2024
‘Age gap, schmage gap - it's a bit cringe, but love is love'
The Independent

‘Age gap, schmage gap - it's a bit cringe, but love is love'

Harriet Dyer and Patrick Brammall are co-writers, co-stars, and married. They tell Ellie Harrison what it’s like to work together on their hit comedy series Colin from Accounts’

time-read
7 mins  |
September 12, 2024
How 'Funeral' cost Arcade Fire blood, sweat and tears
The Independent

How 'Funeral' cost Arcade Fire blood, sweat and tears

Mark Beaumont talks to members of the band about how the seminal album was shaped by death, near-fatal live shows and the Montreal music scene, 20 years since its initial release

time-read
9 mins  |
September 12, 2024
'I realised he could kill me
The Independent

'I realised he could kill me

After James Barr’s ex became abusive, the comedian ended up living in fear of his partner. He believes we need to talk more about domestic violence in the queer community

time-read
5 mins  |
September 12, 2024
'I use my fuel allowance to go out for dinner at The Ivy'
The Independent

'I use my fuel allowance to go out for dinner at The Ivy'

As the backlash grows over the decision to cut the benefit for some pensioners, Zoe Beaty heads to Harrogate in Yorkshire where she nears two very different takes on Labour’s policy

time-read
4 mins  |
September 12, 2024
Where's a warm winter trip outside the Schengen area?
The Independent

Where's a warm winter trip outside the Schengen area?

A Brexit really does keep on giving, doesn’t it? The decision to leave the European Union was followed by the UK securing its status as a “third country”, alongside Paraguay and East Timor, thereby making British travellers subject to all kinds of red tape.

time-read
1 min  |
September 12, 2024
The thrilling tale of six days that changed Britain forever
The Independent

The thrilling tale of six days that changed Britain forever

Ben Macintyre’s unputdownable new book The Siege’ tells the story of an SAS op like no other, writes Robert McCrum

time-read
5 mins  |
September 12, 2024