![]() |
| Aurelia Plath in this note is outraged that the Smith College infirmary in 1951 gave Sylvia Plath sleeping pills (the two words Aurelia wrote in Gregg shorthand). |
Having forced myself to read the three books about Assia Wevill now in print (all by U.S. scholar Dr. Julie Goodspeed-Chadwick, whom I met in December) I linked Aurelia with Assia for the very first time. They met at Court Green in 1967, really liked each other, and exchanged several letters.
This year's big Plath news was the Plath Family Papers opening for research at Yale University's Beinecke Library. The day before the archive officially opened I was there and also for the next entire workweek, mostly reading Aurelia's diaries, begun with hope in 1924 and ending in 1990. And the Plath and Greenwood heirloom family photographs, stunning and unique, open a casement window into Sylvia's paternal and maternal ancestry and give faces to names.
My fiercest thanks to readers who donated funds for transportation to, from, and within the city of New Haven, Connecticut.
I'm honored that you follow AureliaPlath.info. Despite the many advantages of blogspot.com I became aware this year that it's viewed as a hobbyist's platform, and passion for Plath is too important to keep siloed. So in 2026 I plan to join the bigger league of Substack. Most articles there are free to read. I will keep you informed.
Readers' favorites in 2025:
"I Am the Jew" (January)
"Sylvia Plath and Sleeping Pills" (January)
"Sylvia Plath and Phyllis McGinley" (March)
"Sylvia Plath's Hair Ribbons and Hairbands" (June)
"Pleased With Everything: The Plath Family Papers at Yale" (July)
"Sylvia Died Yesterday" (August)
"Aurelia Plath and Assia Wevill: Tight Wires Between Them" (October)
