Bitter Fame: A Life of Sylvia Plath

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Houghton Mifflin, 1989 - Biography & Autobiography - 413 pages
In a book that The New Yorker's Janet Malcolm called "by far the most intelligent and the only aesthetically satisfying" Plath biography, the poet Anne Stevenson narrates and illuminates the ways in which Sylvia Plath created her own legend in life and in poetry, one at odds with the posthumous myth that has grown up around her since her suicide in 1963.

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Contents

EPILOGUE
300
SOURCES AND NOTES
359
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
387
Copyright

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About the author (1989)

Anne Katharine Stevenson was an American British poet and writer. She was born on January 3, 1933 in the United States. Since 1962, she has lived in the UK. She earned her undergraduate degree in Literature (1954) and a master's degree in English (1961) from the University of Michigan. She received an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from the University of Michigan in 2008. As a poet, Stevenson published 16 books, including various selected volumes and two collected editions, The Collected Poems of Anne Stevenson, 1955-1995 (1996) and Poems 1955-2005 (2005). Her last collection, Completing the Circle, was published in March 2020. Her other works included criticism, radio plays, essays, and biographies. Bitter Fame (1989) is her controversial account of the life of Sylvia Plath. She received numerous awards including, the Lannan Lifetime Achievement Award for Poetry; Neglected Masters Award from the Poetry Foundation; and the Northern Rock Foundation Writer's Award. Anne Stevenson died after a short illness on September 14, 2020 in Durham, in northeast England. She was 87.

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