Winter Trees

Winter Trees is a 1971 posthumous collection of poetry by Sylvia Plath, published by her husband Ted Hughes.[1][2] Along with Crossing the Water it provides the remainder of the poems that Plath had written during her state of elevated creativity prior to her suicide.[3]

First edition (publ. Faber & Faber)

Contents

  1. Winter Trees
  2. Child
  3. Brasilia
  4. Gigolo
  5. Childless Woman
  6. Purdah
  7. The Courage of Shutting-Up
  8. The Other
  9. Stopped Dead
  10. The Rabbit Cather
  11. Mystic
  12. By Candlelight
  13. Lyonnesse
  14. Thalidomide
  15. For A Fatherless Son
  16. Lesbos
  17. The Swarm
  18. Mary's Song
  19. Three Women
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gollark: I suppose so.
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gollark: Well, they have arrays there for dependencies, which JSON would represent more nicely than just key/value pairs.

References

  1. Janet Badia (2011). Sylvia Plath and the Mythology of Women Readers. Univ of Massachusetts Press. pp. 189–190. ISBN 1-55849-896-6.
  2. Connie Ann Kirk (1 January 2004). Sylvia Plath: A Biography. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. xx–xxi. ISBN 978-0-313-33214-2.
  3. Jo Gill (11 September 2008). The Cambridge Introduction to Sylvia Plath. Cambridge University Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-139-47413-9.

Further reading

  • Sylvia Plath (25 November 2010). Winter Trees. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-26416-2.


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