In the process she has filled in many of the spaces in the poet’s life that have remained inexplicably blank: her professor-father, Otto Plath’s, early life after immigrating to this country the influential relationship between Plath and her psychiatrist, Ruth Beuscher and the behind-the-scenes alliance between Plath’s mother, Aurelia, and the poet’s benefactress, Olive Higgins Prouty. Meticulously researched and conceived with a sympathetic, sure-footed grasp of her subject, Clark has created a glass-smooth read of a thousand pages about Plath’s brilliant life and art. Heather Clark’s Red Comet is the book I’ve been waiting for. OVER THE YEARS I’VE approached each new biography of Sylvia Plath hoping for a fully comprehensive account of her life that would portray her as the person of extraordinary intellectual and aesthetic accomplishment that she actually was rather than as the madwoman who killed herself.
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