For the Peanut-Crunching Crowd

It’s true that I own a lot of books. I don’t like the word hoarder, but once a book comes into my possession, I don’t care to give it up. I take good care of them, so why shouldn’t they gravitate toward me?

I don’t steal books, though. When I borrow a book from a friend, I put it in a large Baggie so that I don’t damage the cover, and I eventually give it back.  I can’t say that for everyone who has borrowed from me.  You know who you are.

So it’s very unusual for me to damage a book.  That said, I own a book I have read far too many times, and it looks it.    I purchased my version of Sylvia Plath’s The Collected Poems at least two different book designs ago, probably in the 80s.  I’ve damaged this book by loving it–the spine is broken and sections of poems spill out by accident. Old post-it notes, marking poems I’ve studied or researched or just love more than the others, hang out the top.

For my master’s in English, I explicated (def: rip apart with intentions to destroy an indestructible poem) a Sylvia Plath poem “Fever 103.”  At the time I was working on it, I found an old LP in the university library with Plath reading her own poems.  I also ordered earlier drafts of “Fever 103” from the Smith Library and discovered excised lines which tickled me no end.

Today the recording is readily available, but back then I felt as if I’d discovered the Holy Sylvia Grail.

Disclaimer:  I am not, nor have I ever been, a Plath groupie.  Thank you for understanding and accepting that fact.

Have you ever heard Plath read her own poems?  If you haven’t  you are in for a treat.  Here are “Fever 103,” “Lady Lazarus,” and “Daddy.”


9 Comments

Filed under Creative Nonfiction, Poetry, Vintage American culture

9 responses to “For the Peanut-Crunching Crowd

  1. That really is a well-loved book, Luanne. And those recordings of Plath bring back good memories. As far explication is concerned….maybe an explication is just a reply, one among many possible replies.

    Mine was on a Wallace Stevens poem, and in the middle of it, I knew my examiners wanted me to make a positive reply about an entropic poem. So I steered my reply in that direction. Was the poem “Domination of Black”? I can’t remember….

  2. I have! I have heard those! Awesome. I’ve also heard e e cummings reading his poems. Thanks!

  3. How funny! We both posted on Plath today! And I am not a groupie either, just fascinated by her! Today I was talking about her penchant for darkness…I enjoyed her journals the most of anything I read by her, just because journaling has comprised most of my writing in my life, so far.

    http://lindseygendke.wordpress.com/2013/04/18/the-dark-and-light-in-a-writers-life/

    • lucewriter

      Her journals are fascinating. I loved reading them, although she gets really crude sometimes. And she clearly was often not a very nice person IMO. Her journals are good, though, like her poetry. I don’t really like her short stories. The Bell Jar is a good read.
      Thanks for sharing your link, Lindsey!

  4. I have recently written an article on whether Sylvia Plath was feminist or not.
    Please read it and let me know what you think, I hope my writing is a thoughtful and eloquent as yours.
    Freya Bromley

    http://pigeonsandpolitics.wordpress.com/2013/04/19/was-sylvia-plath-a-feminist/

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