![]() just as one is wondering whether there can possibly be anything new to be said, here comes Heather Clark’s Red Comet: The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath hurtling down the chute, weighing in at more than 1,000 densely printed pages. A bravura performance, Red Comet is the one we’ve waited for. By centering Plath’s evolving command of craft-by focusing on her peerless lyrical ear-Clark peels away clichéd interpretations much as the poet shed her false selves. Yet this gold standard of a biography does something more: Red Comet is a page-turner, particularly when Clark shifts to Plath’s final two years in England. ![]() Clark delves deeper than biographers who have gone before: We see the poet as if peering through the Hubble Telescope for the first time, blurred galaxies and nebulas bursting into crystalline detail. From both perspectives Clark evokes how their common purpose rose and later diverged, invaluable reportage missing from other books. Red Comet takes us on a literary picaresque, drawing on untapped archives, Plath’s complete correspondence, interviews with surviving members of the couple’s social and professional circles, and, most crucially, on Hughes’ journals and letters. incandescent, richly researched biography. ![]()
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