Her Husband Audiobook By Diane Middlebrook cover art

Her Husband

Hughes and Plath, A Marriage

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Her Husband

By: Diane Middlebrook
Narrated by: Bernadette Dunne
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About this listen

Ted Hughes married Sylvia Plath in 1956, at the outset of their brilliant careers. Plath's suicide six-and-a-half years later, for which many held Hughes accountable, changed his life, his closest relationships, his standing in the literary world, and brought new significance to his poetry.

Middlebrook presents a portrait of Hughes as a man, as a poet, and as a husband haunted, and nourished, his entire life by the aftermath of his first marriage. How marriages fail and how men fail in marriages is one of the book's central themes.

©2003 Diane Middlebrook (P)2003 Blackstone Audiobooks
Art & Literature Authors European Literary History & Criticism Marriage & Long-Term Partnerships Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Relationships Suicide United States World Literature Marriage Celebrity
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Critic reviews

"Middlebrook's [book] is sure to be the gold standard. Astutely reasoned, fluidly written, and developed with psychological acuity, the work is a sympathetically balanced assessment of two lives that flamed brightly with the incandescent fire of creative genius." (Publishers Weekly)
"The most balanced, most literary and interpretatively astute, and best-written analysis yet of the saga of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes." (Booklist)
"Sympathetic but resolutely unsentimental....intelligent, sensitive, at times harrowing." (Joyce Carol Oates, Washington Post Book World)

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Reading in between the lines as a woman who reads feminist work by people like Andrea Dworkin, i think the author was too nice to Hughes. Evidence that Hughes was weak and jealous: he couldn’t manage caring for his children in solitude AND writing poetry at the same time like Plath did. So much evidence that he was jealous of her and was at the very least emotionally abusive.
Overall I enjoyed the book because of how detailed it is.

Ted Hughes is so pretentious

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This gives a greater understanding of the relationship between Hughes and Sylvia Platt. Really enjoyed.

A greater understanding

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absorbing analysis of the Plath/Hughes relationship. even a casual Plath fan will be pleased. well done.

engaging

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I know it is a critical review of their work. It is quite good for that. Great narration. Just could have used a bit more about their personal lives, affecting their work. I love Plath, but if you do not, really not a book I would greatly recommend.

Good Narration. Good insurance gets on their work.

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This is a really interesting biography. If you're into Plath then this is a great listen. A little on the long side, but it does go into depth about the relationship between Hughes and Plath without a great deal of bias. This book shares a side of Plath not seen in other bios. Recommended.

An interesting listen

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Would you consider the audio edition of Her Husband to be better than the print version?

After listening to the audio I would enjoy the print version as well

What was one of the most memorable moments of Her Husband?

The poetry of Sylvia Plath

Have you listened to any of Bernadette Dunne’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

No but would definitely like to hear more

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

The sadness of Plath

Any additional comments?

After listening to this I want to read more of their poetry.

Fascinating lives of two entwined poets

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Diane was my English teacher at Stanford. A relentlessly inspiring woman for whom I feel a tremendous debt of gratitude to have been coached by her... and now, to read how cleverly and profoundly she unveils the multifaceted relationship between Plath & Hughes. As an audible book can be ruined by a "not quite right" voice-over reader, this one is very, very good...and easy on the ear. go for it!

Brilliant research and poignant writing

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This is a good book, well-presented and structured in general and with occasional flashes of true insight into this tragic story. My criticisms are minimal: In terms of the audio format one is the mispronunciation of French words by the narrator which I felt was easily avoidable and therefore inexcusable. Another the fact that the chapters seem to be made up of titled paragraphs. The narrator reads these titles immediately after the end of the previous paragraph with a long pause after the title instead of a short pause on either side. This can be somewhat disconcerting. In terms of the writing itself: Middlebrook has chosen to present an analytical account in more or less choronolgical order, with frequent references to previous and future events that are relevant. This makes the book a little jumpy and disjointed and results in a sometimes repetitive narrative. While it is possible to skip re-used passages when reading one is forced to suffer through them when listening. Also, the author would do well to educate herself on the difference between England and Great Britain; Ted Hughes was the Poet Laureate of the latter and not the former. Aside from a certain coldness to the intensely human story she is telling, Middlebrook does a superb job. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the Plath and Hughes drama; though I do not know how satisfying brief quotes in the text would be to someone who had not read Plath's journals and poetry already. The story itself cannot be anything but fascinating.

Tragedy is a good formula.

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This was an interesting listen if you are a Sylvia Plath fan and can't get enough of her. I am a fan and I enjoyed it.

INTERESTING

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