Sylvia Plath

Born October 27, 1932
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Died February 11, 1963 (Aged years)
Primrose Hill, London, England
Region North America
Language English
Profession Novelist, Poet, Short Story Writer
Education Smith College
University of Cambridge
Period Contemporary
Movements Confessional
Notable Works The Bell Jar, Ariel, Lady Lazarus, Daddy
Awards Glascock Prize
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
Bio Sylvia Plath was an American poet, novelist, and short story writer. She is credited with advancing the genre of confessional poetry and is best known for The Colossus and Other Poems, Ariel, and The Bell Jar, a semi-autobiographical novel published shortly before her suicide in 1963.
NoPoemTopic
26ElmEchoes, Fear, Love, Madness
25Face LiftAnesthetist, Clinic, Hospital, Sedatives
24Frog AutumnAutumn, Frost, Insects, Summer
23Getting ThereBribery, Gods, Gorilla, Wheels
22GoatsuckerFables, Goatherds, Goatsucker, Moon
21Gold Mouths CryAutumn, Bronze, Gold, Leaves
20InsomniacMemories, Night, Sleep, Stars
19KindnessComfort, Healing, Kindness, Vulnerability
18LesbosDespair, Isolation, Violence
17Love LetterIsolation, Perception, Rebirth, Transformation
16Mad Girl’s Love SongDreams, Imagination, Rebirth, Stars
15MedusaLove, Sea, Shadow
14MirrorMirror, Objectivity, Reflection
13Morning SongBirth, Identity, Reflection, Transition
12Old Ladies’ HomeAging, Isolation, Nostalgia, Resignation