Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Kat's Reviews > The Bell Jar

The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
100759205
's review


When I was in high school, I was absolutely convinced that The Bell Jar was meant to be my favorite book of all time. The aesthetic of the "sad girl" "female manipulator" book appealed to me even then, before TikTok made it a trend. I never ended up actually reading it at the time, thanks to my old aversion to the classics, which I'm grateful for. I know that teen me would've taken all the wrong things about this story to heart, romanticized the fuck out of it, and I probably turned out 1000% more insufferable than I am right now (which is still plenty insufferable, don't worry. I mean, shit, I'm writing this and listening to Norman Fucking Rockwell at the same time. I'm a nuisance, as I was always meant to be).

Anyway. Fast forward, I'm graduating from college in two short weeks and I figured that if there ever was a time to read this finally, now would be it. The Bell Jar is supposedly one of THE books for every girlie in her twenties, and time may have passed but I still have a giant soft spot for reading about women vs the void. So here we are.

I don't think anything I have to say here that's going to come across as particularly outlandish. There's not really much I have to say at all, hence the three star. The writing is gorgeous, as I assumed it would be. Plath was obviously skilled with imagery and capable of creating poetry out of anything. I also found it incredibly interesting to read the book that came before so many of the ones I love now, and see what might've been used as inspiration. Lastly, I am glad I got to find all the famous quotes/scenes I've heard over the years within their context. Having the chance to underline "I am I am I am" in my dinky little paperback was satisfying, not gonna lie.

Similarly, I don't have any criticisms with any real backing. All I know is I started to rapidly lose interest in the second half and felt nothing but disillusionment by the end. Maybe that's the intended effect. Maybe if I were to analyze this like its homework I'd be able to come up with something other than 'I neither liked nor disliked it' as my final thought. But unfortunately, I read it for funsies, that was the first thing that shot through my head when I shut the book, and so far nothing else has followed.

I can appreciate this novel as a piece of good writing and an important part of sad bitch history, but if not for the fact that it is an established piece of literature I really wouldn't be giving it a second thought--or a review, for that matter.
694 likes ·  âˆ� flag

Sign into Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ to see if any of your friends have read The Bell Jar.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

April 30, 2022 – Started Reading
April 30, 2022 – Shelved
May 3, 2022 –
page 38
15.57%
May 4, 2022 –
page 77
31.56% "just read the famous fig tree quote, feeling like a new bitch"
May 9, 2022 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-17 of 17 (17 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

message 1: by Polly (new) - added it

Polly March Will you be sharing a review on this one? X


Luiza Elaborate!


Berlyn understandable, and this is coming from someone who gave it 5 stars


Allison feel like it's gotta be read in that 15-20 age to get 5 stars like i gave it 😅


message 5: by ray (new) - rated it 5 stars

ray ma'am?


message 6: by Cindy (new)

Cindy Witte I DNF this book. I didn't care for the characters and found it depressing.


Jeffrey Haskey-Valerius how absolutely dare you


Hidingbehindbooks Bless us with your review please


message 9: by eveniece (new) - added it

eveniece i need motivation to read this � my only reason atp is cause it’s a classic


message 10: by Kat (new) - added it

Kat Jeffrey wrote: "how absolutely dare you"

I actually feel so bad I am a traitor to all the sad lit hoes out there


message 11: by Kat (new) - added it

Kat eveniece wrote: "i need motivation to read this � my only reason atp is cause it’s a classic"

can confirm, it's not gonna do it for you if you're JUST reading it bc of that classic lit status. skip unless you're actually interested in the story, for your sanity <3


message 12: by Szangi (new)

Szangi This is a book about depression, and not sadness, so.... imho someone who ""resonates"" with it is not very lucky, unfortunately.


message 13: by Yui (new) - rated it 4 stars

Yui @szangi true


message 14: by Geneva (new) - added it

Geneva When you read a classic, remember the time it was written. Gone with the wind wouldn't really be understood last year.


message 15: by AR ! (new)

AR ! ok


message 16: by Seb (new) - added it

Seb Can somewhat relate. When I finished the novel, I was confused because I’d thought it would end differently—some false memory told me it ended with the notes of a piano. The ending was actually quite interesting and uplifting, but then I read the afterword, a section of a novel that bookworms usually never dread, and there I read the bitter twist of her fate. I had already known, but including it at the end of the novel was a real gut punch.


Lilly Kolacia Yeah same


back to top