Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at plath's.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Plath's.
Examples
-
It took me a long time to figure out why I was keeping myself in that kind of a Catch-22 limbo -- and Sylvia Plath's heroine in The Bell Jar helped me untangle my own knotty psychology.
Teddy Wayne: Interview With Maura Kelly, Author of Much Ado About Loving Teddy Wayne 2012
-
It took me a long time to figure out why I was keeping myself in that kind of a Catch-22 limbo -- and Sylvia Plath's heroine in The Bell Jar helped me untangle my own knotty psychology.
Teddy Wayne: Interview With Maura Kelly, Author of Much Ado About Loving Teddy Wayne 2012
-
Like Plath's 'Ariel' poems, they are decidedly not nice.
Michael Roth: Thinking Photography With Diane Arbus and Errol Morris Michael Roth 2011
-
Sylvia Plath's baroque Daddy, overseeing her imagination of herself as the archetype of wandering suffering, is the great gift that never stops giving, and Olds has no shame in exploiting this figure over and over.
Anis Shivani: Philip Levine and Other Mediocrities: What it Takes to Ascend to the Poet Laureateship Anis Shivani 2011
-
Like Plath's 'Ariel' poems, they are decidedly not nice.
Michael Roth: Thinking Photography With Diane Arbus and Errol Morris Michael Roth 2011
-
Like Plath's 'Ariel' poems, they are decidedly not nice.
Michael Roth: Thinking Photography With Diane Arbus and Errol Morris Michael Roth 2011
-
Sylvia Plath's cult novel The Bell Jar, which appeared in the same year, also has echoes of Jaffe's novel.
-
Fiction: Plath's The Bell Jar is a perennial favorite, but you should also consider The Women's Room, by Marilyn French, which sold twenty million copies.
Feminist Gift-Shopping is Man's Work Con Chapman 2011
-
Like Plath's 'Ariel' poems, they are decidedly not nice.
Michael Roth: Thinking Photography With Diane Arbus and Errol Morris Michael Roth 2011
-
Sylvia Plath's baroque Daddy, overseeing her imagination of herself as the archetype of wandering suffering, is the great gift that never stops giving, and Olds has no shame in exploiting this figure over and over.
Anis Shivani: Philip Levine and Other Mediocrities: What it Takes to Ascend to the Poet Laureateship Anis Shivani 2011
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.