I'm going to take this off the list for now even though it's a DNF and something I plan to return to, mostly. 5 stars for what I did read. I skipped a bunch of book reviews for things I most likely will never read, though sometimes I got sucked in anyway , his writing is just that strong.
The Sylvia Plath parts are of course what will draw a lot readers. I found them largely exonerating for much of the criticism leveled at the evil Hughes. You know, for rearranging her manuscript, for destroying some of her journals, etc.
The thing is, she'd herself moved her TOC around, and it's very hard to arrange a manuscript of poetry. Despite come of her other successes, it had been very hard to find a publisher for Ariel--it took several years, in fact, so there were several rearrangements. As for the destruction of a one or two of her journals, it would have been better to have kept them. But he was in the crush of the loss, and there was content he says he did not think the children should see. Everyone has assumed this content had to do with Hughes, and perhaps some of it did. But I would guess a fair amount was directed at the children. Trying to write with young children around, especially when you feel, as Plath did, that you have to be the perfect mother, is a nightmare. I can see why he would want to keep this material away from the kids, given the fact that their mother killed herself while they were alone in the house with her.
Anyway, I read a couple of other really interesting essays about writing, but I'm putting it aside for now.