Ariel: The Restored Edition: A Facsimile of Plath's Manuscript, Reinstating Her Original Selection and Arrangement (P.S.)

by Sylvia Plath
Ariel: The Restored Edition: A Facsimile of Plath's Manuscript, Reinstating Her Original Selection and Arrangement (P.S.)
book data
2690 ratings, 4.37 average rating, 166 reviews (more data...)
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published
November 1st 2005 (first published 1999) by Harper Perennial Modern Classics

binding
Paperback, 256 pages

setting
Unknown

isbn
0060732601   (isbn13: 9780060732608)

description
Sylvia Plath churned out her final poems at the remarkable rate of two or three a day, and Robert Lowell describes them as written by "hardly a...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 3427)




brook
07/14/07

i studied this collection senior year of college in my "hand of the poet" seminar. i wrote a 20 page paper on 3 poems from here. i studied plath's handwriting. i analyzed the placement of each poem, and how hughes (sorry to say) kind of screwed everything up in that regard. to me, this is the ultimate. when i think of good poetry, this is the first thing that pops into my head. when i accidently cut my finger chopping up vegetables for dinner, i immediately begin reciting "cut...more
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Jenna
Jenna rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
09/17/07

Read in September, 2007
There are two adjectives commonly applied to this book by people who haven't read it: it is often said to be a "feminist" book, and a "depressing" one. I think these two not-quite-accurate labels arise so frequently because Sylvia Plath is, unfortunately, better-known to the general public for being female and psychologically troubled than for being an accomplished poet.

This is not an agenda-driven book, it is not a book aimed at only a select audience, and it i...more
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henry
08/08/07

bookshelves: poetry
Read in July, 2007
an outstanding collection of poems. don't let her reputation fool you, just because she's every depressed high schooler's favorite poet doesn't mean she's not damn good. Concision, passion, attention to detail, and verbs that will straight up eat you. And what's more, there's an undercurrent of what we think of today as the rhythm of slam poetry in her work, certain poems have that spoken momentum that we associate with slam without all the cheesiness and predictability. read it again, you w...more
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Faith-Anne
bookshelves: my-favorites, poetry, sylvia-plath
"Ariel" is one of my favorite collections of poetry. Plath really speaks to me. I can feel not only the pain in her poetry, but also the beauty.
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Rebecca
Doesn't include my fave Plath poem...

The Thin People

They are always with us, the thin people
Meager of dimension as the gray people

On a movie-screen. They
Are unreal, we say:

It was only in a movie, it was only
In a war making evil headlines when we

Were small that they famished and
Grew so lean and would not round

Out their stalky limbs again though peace
Plumped the bellies of the mice

U...more
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Kaitlyn
bookshelves: poetry
Read in January, 2007
recommends it for: poetry lovers and those interested in mental health
Last summer I read The Bell Jar and last summer I came to love Sylvia Plath in a way that I didn’t even think was possible. I think she’s someone who’s easy to relate to but at the same time a figure that doesn’t even feel real to me. I understand her and yet I don’t.

That’s what makes Ariel so magical.

I’m not really a poetry person, but I had to read this after I first fell in love with Sylvia. What made this volume most remarkable to me was the time peri...more
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Venessa
Read in January, 2005
Ariel as Ariel was meant to be read: I was thrilled to not only see Plath’s work at long last published as how she wished it to be, I was also ecstatic to see her own typewritten galleys in part two of the novel, with differing versions of arguably the poet’s most famous poems, but also her own comments about some of the poems for a BBC radio broadcast from “back in the day” and differing versions of the poem, “The Swarm,” which Ted Hughes included in the original United States First...more
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Manny
12/01/08

bookshelves: strongly-recommended
Read in January, 1977
One of the great poetic works of the 20th century. I know a lot of it by heart; my favourite poem is "Elm".

I have often wondered if she would have been able to write this if she hadn't been on the verge of suicide... none of her other stuff is as powerful. I thought the scenes in the Gwynneth Paltrow movie covering that period were extremely good, and gave some insight.
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Malinda
bookshelves: poetry, read-in-2008
Read in November, 2008
recommends it for: poets, poetry enthusiasts, mad girls
This is an amazing book of poetry to lose yourself in. Plath is a Queen Bee of poetry; I think I will be deciphering her words until my dying day. I especially loved: "Elm," "Lady Lazarus," "The Detective," "The Jailor," and "Daddy." In fact it's very difficult to find a poem in this collection that doesn't resonate with me or evoke some sort of strong emotion.
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Ashley
09/04/08

Read in June, 2005
Plath, unfairly, carries an association with weepy undergraduates romanticizing her suicide. And it's true, that the way Plath died often overshadows her poetry. These poems, the last ones, especially reflect a growing madness.

But these aren't the ravings of a melodramatic basket-case. The poetry is strong and terrifying - no feminine floweriness, but bald, strange thoughts. Take "I rise with my red hair ... and I eat men like air" in "Lady Lazarus," or the stran...more
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Melissa
I used to find Plath incomprehensible. Why? I sat down in the library stacks last week and read this cover to cover. In her daughter Freida's introduction, she asks the reader to judge Plath's work, not her life. Her perspective of her parents brings both back to human scale. Is it consumer culture bleeding into art that makes us voyeurs, is it also human to turn others into myths?
"Love set you going like a fat gold watch..."
The poem's voice is so clear and cold. I'm captiva...more
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justin
04/23/07

bookshelves: poetry
I know the fashionable thing is to rail on Ted's role as editor, but I love both versions of this collection. My favorites are the bee poems, and the ones she wrote for her kids.

You're

Clownlike, happiest on your hands,
Feet to the stars, and moon-skulled,
Gilled like a fish. A common-sense
Thumbs-down on the dodo's mode.
Wrapped up in yourself like a spool,
Trawling your dark as owls do.
Mute as a turnip from the Fourth
Of July to All ...more
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Steven
03/11/08

Like the woman herself, I feel this collection will haunt me, making me return to its poems again and again, to relive their ingenious craft and re-experience their sometimes cavalier approach to the grave topics of depression and suicide. Of all the lines on these subjects, the one that resonates most for me is the ultimate statement of the poem “The Arrival of the Bee Box,” in which Plath imagines that the container a mail-order beehive arrives in represents the stifling constraints ...more
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Tara
12/22/08

bookshelves: favorites, poetry, read-in-08
recommends it for: poetry and Plath lovers
I know I've read most, if not all of these poems, at one point or another, but I have a renewed interest as-of-late for the lovely Sylvia.

And these poems are just...wow. I cannot explain in words. So naked and stunning. I fell asleep with this on my chest last night. 'Tulips' is so painful, so perfect. What a gift she had.


"They have propped my head between the pillow and the sheet-cuff
Like an eye between two white lids that will not shut.
Stupi...more
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Lindsey
bookshelves: finished-in-2008
Read in January, 2008
A certain AP English teacher gave this book to me as a high school graduation present and I never bothered to open it until last week.
State the obvious: Sylvia had some issue. Many of which I'm sure are featured in this collection of poems if you want to bother to analyze them. I've never been one for analyzing poems and literature.
My no good, ameture opinion is as follows:
The stuff I enjoyed had a good flowing theme to them (easy to follow for the ameture poetry reader), th...more
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justin
justin rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
04/23/07

bookshelves: poetry
I know the fashionable thing is to rail on Ted's role as editor, but I love both versions of this collection. My favorites are the bee poems, and the ones she wrote for her kids. Here's the last two-and-a-half stanzas of the restored text:

"The bees are all women,
Maids and the long royal lady.
They have got rid of the men,

The blunt, clumsy stumblers, the boors.
Winter is for women--
The woman, still at her knitting,
At the cradle of Spanish...more
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Ms.
12/19/08

Read in January, 1970
I recently had enough courage to watch the movie, "sylvia" and had to go back to Ariel. I'd forgotten about the less sensational poems that are worth having another look at for their precision.
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Jerome
08/14/07

Read in January, 1994
I know, I know. Sylvia Plath is a bit of a cliche. Even Ryan Adams wrote a funny-sad song about her. LOL. But Ariel is really amazing, in terms of the intensity of her words. It's tantamount to setting her house on fire to get attention. It is painful to read. And we can probably blame her for launching the careers of a nation of suicidal female poets (though I still think that's a really cynical and chauvinist joke). But Sylvia's stuff is always compelling, especially in Ariel. Because of this...more
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Gloria
Gloria rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
09/11/07

bookshelves: oldfavorites
I visited Seattle's new art museum the other day and saw on the wall a "Sylvia Plath Quilt" done by a woman artist. I sat in front of it for several minutes, recalling some of my favorite Plath poems.

Most come from her collection "Ariel". The one quoted in the quilt is:

Dying
Is an art, like everything else.
I do it exceptionally well.

In my early 20s Plath's work captured my interest and imagination. Suicidal feminist, how could...more
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Emer
04/03/08

Finally the way she wanted it, Ariel is a terrific collection of poetry from the pen of Sylvia Plath. After her death, her husband Ted Hughes changed the order of the poems, but this has been restored, from Morning Song's "love" to Wintering's "spring". Plath's unique style of writing and imagery are rampant throughout, especially when it comes to the two finest poems in the collection: "Lesbos" and "Daddy." It is also fascinating to see the facsimile edit...more
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Ariel (Paperback)
Ariel: Poems By Sylvia Plath (Paperback)
Ariel (Paperback)
Ariel (Paperback)
Ariel: The Restored Edition: A Facsimile of Plath's Manuscript, Reinstating Her Original Selection and Arrangement (Hardcover)







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