Available Formats
Paperback, Main
Published: 1st July 2005
Hardback, Main
Published: 9th November 2010
Hardback, Main
Published: 1st October 2019
Paperback, Main - Re-issue
Published: 7th October 2025
Hardback, Main - Re-issue
Published: 7th October 2025
Paperback, Main - Faber Modern Classics
Published: 22nd April 2015
Paperback, Main
Published: 1st June 2007
Ariel
By (Author) Sylvia Plath
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
7th October 2025
3rd July 2025
Main - Re-issue
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
Paperback
104
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
'The world is blood-hot and personal': in her moving and illuminating introduction, the poet Emily Berry remembers her own teenage encounters with Ariel and offers a personal way into this definitive collection. She shows us how Plath can crystallize our most volatile emotions, transforming them into images so potent and precise that they resonate with us all. Plath has been an inspiration to successive generations; her influence, enduring and profound.
'If the poems are despairing, vengeful and destructive, they are at the same time tender, open to things, and also unusually clever, sardonic, hardminded . . . They are works of great artistic purity and, despite all the nihilism, great generosity . . . the book is a major literary event.' A. Alvarez, Observer, 1965
Sylvia Plath (1932-63) was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and studied at Smith College. In 1955 she went to Cambridge University on a Fulbright scholarship, where she met and later married Ted Hughes. She published one collection of poems in her lifetime, The Colossus (1960), and a novel, The Bell Jar (1963). Her Collected Poems, which contains her poetry written from 1956 until her death, was published in 1981 and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry.