(Goodbye to) Winter Reads by Sylvia Plath (#ReadIndies) & Kathleen Winter

The sunshine, temperatures and flora suggest that spring is here to stay, though I wouldn’t be surprised by a return of the cold and wet in March. We live in the wrong part of the UK for snow lovers; we didn’t get any snow this winter, apart from some early-morning flurries one day when I was fast asleep. My seasonal reading consisted of a lesser-known posthumous poetry collection, a record of a sea voyage past Greenland, and a silly children’s book.

 

Winter Trees by Sylvia Plath (1971)

A prefatory note from Ted Hughes explains that these poems “are all out of the batch from which the Ariel poems were more or less arbitrarily chosen and they were all composed in the last nine months of Sylvia Plath’s life.” Ariel is much the stronger collection. There are only 19 poems here; the final one, “Three Women,” is more of a play (subtitled “A Poem for Three Voices”) set on a maternity ward. Motherhood is a central concern throughout. There’s harsh, unpleasant language around womanhood in general. The opening title poem is a marvel of artistic imagery, assonance and internal rhyme, but also contains a metaphor that made me cringe: “Knowing neither abortions nor bitchery, / Truer than women, / They seed so effortlessly!”

That paints motherhood as hard won, as “Childless Woman” reinforces by turning purposeless menstruation into a horror story with its vocabulary of “a child’s shriek” — “Spiderlike” — “Uttering nothing but blood— / Taste it, dark red!” — “My funeral” — “the mouths of corpses”. Plath was certainly ambivalent about babies (“Thalidomide” is particularly frightening) but I bristled at childlessness being linked with living only for oneself. Then again, pretty much everything – men, God, travel, animals – is portrayed negatively here. “Winter Trees” is the single poem I’d anthologize. (University library)

Published by Faber, so counts for #ReadIndies

 

Boundless: Adventures in the Northwest Passage by Kathleen Winter (2015)

I read this excellent travel book slowly, over most of the winter, including during that surreal period when He Who Shall Not Be Named was threatening to annex Greenland. Winter was invited to be a writer-in-residence aboard an icebreaker travelling through the Northwest Passage, past southwest Greenland and threading between the islands of the Canadian Arctic. She was prepared: a friend had taught her that the only thing to say in these sorts of lucky, unexpected scenarios is “My bags are already packed.” Her ‘getaway bag’ of two pairs of underwear, a T-shirt, a pair of jeans, and a LBD wasn’t exactly Arctic-ready, but she still had a head start. She adds an old concertina and worn hiking boots that resemble “lobes of some mushroom cracked off the bole of an old warrior tree.”

It’s not a long or gruelling trip, so there’s not much of the bellyaching that bores me in trekking books. Winter is interested in everything: birds, folk music, Indigenous arts and crafts, her fellow passengers’ stories, the infamous lost Arctic expeditions, and her family’s history in England and Canada. She collects her scraps of notes in a Ziploc, and that’s what this book is – a grab bag. Winter is enthusiastic yet prioritizes quiet epiphanies about the sacredness of land and creatures over thrills – though their vessel does get stranded on rocks and requires a Coast Guard rescue. It would be interesting to reread her Orange Prize-shortlisted novel about an intersex person, Annabel. (If you hanker to go deeper about Greenland, read This Cold Heaven by Gretel Ehrlich and Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow by Peter Høeg.) (Secondhand – Bas Books)

 

& A bonus children’s book:

The Snow Womble by Elisabeth Beresford; illus. Margaret Gordon (1975) – I thought this would be a cute one to read even though I’m unfamiliar with the Wombles. But it’s just a one-note extended joke about the creatures not being able to tell their snowman version of Great-Uncle Bulgaria apart from the real one. The best thing about reading this was the frontispiece’s juxtaposition of elements: the computer-printed bookplate, the nominal secondhand price (withdrawn from London Borough of Sutton Public Libraries), and the wholly inappropriate inscription Grandad Nick chose from King Lear! (Little Free Library)

16 responses

  1. margaret21's avatar

    From this selection, the appropriately-named Winter appeals. I don’t believe we’re done with the season yet.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Today’s sunshine and 16 degrees was absurd for late February. I feel bad for the insects and flowers that have woken up, and the birds that have started nesting — I think we have more cold, wet days ahead.

      Like

      1. margaret21's avatar

        I feel bad for wildlife too. They can’t have a clue what’s going on. And no properly cold days either, to freeze out any nasties!

        Like

  2. A Life in Books's avatar

    The only snow I’ve seen this winter was in Copenhagen where they had more than they’ve had in fifteen years. Adding Boundless to my list. Have you read Jenny Diski’s Skating to Antarctica? Might make a good winter read for next year if you haven’t.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I may need to become a snow tourist if I want to see any significant falls again.

      Skating to Antarctica is wonderful! I’d love to reread it.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Elle's avatar

    “Knowing neither abortion nor bitchery” sounds like the slogan for a (possibly totalitarian) futuristic commune. Maybe not quite what Plath had in mind. She’s never less than an arresting writer, but these poems show so much pain, it’s very hard to look beyond that and find anything else. I do like the sound of Kathleen Winter’s book, though. (And – what the hell, Grandad Nick?!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Tortured, certainly. Ariel seemed to get many more of the good lines, though, despite Hughes’s claims of “arbitrary” organisation.

      Methinks Grandad Nick doesn’t know much about what to give children!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. kaggsysbookishramblings's avatar

    An interesting selection of books. It’s a long time since I’ve read this particular Plath collection – yes, she’s harsh but as Elle says, full of pain especially at this point in her life.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      There are a few more Plath collections for me to source. I think I started with the best one (Ariel), though.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Klausbernd's avatar

    Dear Rebecca
    I loved K. Winter’s book as well as Gretel Ehrlich’s and Høeg’s.
    Especially the first two books give a genuine picture of what it is like being in the High Arctic. I have been there on two expeditions.
    Thanks for the great review
    Klausbernd 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thank you! Those must have been exciting trips. I don’t expect I’ll ever see the Arctic, but I love visiting it through books. Here’s a song for you.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Klausbernd's avatar

        Dear Rebecca
        Thank you very much for the song by David Gray.
        I blogged about my last trip to NE Greenland and Svalbard https://kbvollmarblog.wordpress.com/2013/08/22/heroes/
        here and the next two posts. It was exciting indeed, the greatest landscapes or icescapes I have ever seen.
        I love the Arctic. Unfortunately, now I am too old for an expedition to take me.
        All the best from the little village next to the big sea
        Klausbernd 🙂

        Like

  6. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    I loved Winter’s book; like you I read it very slowly, but I really enjoyed her way of “exploring on the page” and I’m happy to be reminded of it. Annabel I really loved and I bought a couple copies as gifts because I thought it was most beautifully written and sensitively told; it would be a hefty one to buy from overseas, and was from an indie press…maybe an epub? (It is also very wintry in parts.) I’ve been reading for winter too.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. sheridancarr's avatar

    One of my favourite winter reads was Moominland Midwinter by Tove Jansson. I loved the Moomins as a child and every so often I reread one of my childhood favourites. This book is quite dark in parts, dealing with feelings of loneliness and belonging, as well as the sheer harshness of a cold winter. The author’s illustrations are every bit as wonderful as I remember and it was a strangely comforting read on a damp cold winter’s day.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks for reading, Sheridan — so sweet of you! I love the Moomin books but only discovered them as an adult (they’re not really known in the US). I love how Jansson balances whimsy and melancholy. You’re right, there’s something comforting about that world.

      Like

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