It also works as a unique lens on the person herself, the brilliant author Sylvia Plath. The structure is unusual. As the chapters move backward through time, from late 1962 through summer 1961, each reveals the viewpoint of someone who interacted with Plath over these fifteen-odd months.
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| Pub. by Scribner (June 9, 2026) |
In the beginning, Sylvia is present only through the memories of others and the artifacts she left behind. At Court Green, a thatched farmhouse in Devon, Nancy Axworthy, who served as part-time housekeeper to Plath and her family during their residence there, cleans up the home before closing it up for the winter. As Nancy scours the sink, she keeps a loose eye on her grandson while a neighbor offers his thoughts about Sylvia. We’re privy to her life through these conversations:
I said she didn’t have to leave, Gilbert says, laughing. She’s a free agent. Especially now she doesn’t have a husband telling her what to do.
Separated from her husband, poet Ted Hughes, after discovering his infidelity, Sylvia has moved with her two children to a flat in London. Although she’d told Nancy she expected to return to Court Green in the spring, others suspect she won’t be back.
Knowledge of Plath’s death by suicide at her London home in February 1963 (not mentioned, but so well known that it’s not a spoiler) is always in the background. Yet this isn’t a somber novel. While the pacing is relaxed, it’s infused with personality and life, along with periodic glimpses of the brilliant yellow daffodils that Sylvia loved.
Each of the viewpoint characters is fully dimensional, and their impressions of Sylvia progressively join to form a kaleidoscopic picture.
In October 1962, Dr. Hugh Webb, a physician in North Tawton, reflects on the differences between his current daily routine and his previous medical practice in Kaduna, Nigeria. Then he spots Sylvia in his waiting room. She’s injured her thumb while cutting an onion and sits calmly, unflinchingly, as he sews it up and makes careful inquiries about her health.
Months earlier, on a Tuesday morning in June, Stella Woodhouse, a producer at London’s Broadcasting House, sets up a recording session for Sylvia and her reading of her “dramatic poem,” as she describes it. Sylvia is a tall, sociable woman with a distinctive transatlantic accent (“Wait until you hear her… sounds more RP than the ruddy Queen,” Stella’s colleague says) who has exacting standards – for herself most of all.
Is this what it is like to be inside Miss Plath’s mind? This rich exactitude, this precise point of intelligence, this controlled tempo. Each individual item considered, measured, selected.
It is focused, sharp, amusing. It holds your attention. It is precisely what a six-minute Features recording ought to be.
(Anyone curious to hear Plath’s voice firsthand, with its unique Massachusetts-English blend, can do so; there are numerous recordings on YouTube.)
Readers seeking in-depth views of Sylvia’s troubled marriage or creative process won’t find them here, but there are hints. Throughout the chapters, we’re immersed in Sylvia’s domestic side – at a dress shop, beside a local churchyard, at home as a salesman demonstrates a newfangled washing machine, at a riding lesson atop a horse called Ariel – and see her hopes for finding contentment and creative inspiration in the English countryside.
The reverse chronology means that The Daffodil Days ends on a poignant note of promise. Extensive prior knowledge of Sylvia Plath’s biography and works isn’t required. If you’re unfamiliar with all things Plath, you’ll miss some references within this beautifully subtle novel, but don’t be surprised if it also spurs new interest in her life and work.
The Daffodil Days appeared from Scribner/Simon & Schuster on June 9th. This is a significant expansion/reworking of my original (175-word) review for Booklist, which ran in their June 2026 issue.
I said she didn’t have to leave, Gilbert says, laughing. She’s a free agent. Especially now she doesn’t have a husband telling her what to do.
Separated from her husband, poet Ted Hughes, after discovering his infidelity, Sylvia has moved with her two children to a flat in London. Although she’d told Nancy she expected to return to Court Green in the spring, others suspect she won’t be back.
Knowledge of Plath’s death by suicide at her London home in February 1963 (not mentioned, but so well known that it’s not a spoiler) is always in the background. Yet this isn’t a somber novel. While the pacing is relaxed, it’s infused with personality and life, along with periodic glimpses of the brilliant yellow daffodils that Sylvia loved.
Each of the viewpoint characters is fully dimensional, and their impressions of Sylvia progressively join to form a kaleidoscopic picture.
In October 1962, Dr. Hugh Webb, a physician in North Tawton, reflects on the differences between his current daily routine and his previous medical practice in Kaduna, Nigeria. Then he spots Sylvia in his waiting room. She’s injured her thumb while cutting an onion and sits calmly, unflinchingly, as he sews it up and makes careful inquiries about her health.
Months earlier, on a Tuesday morning in June, Stella Woodhouse, a producer at London’s Broadcasting House, sets up a recording session for Sylvia and her reading of her “dramatic poem,” as she describes it. Sylvia is a tall, sociable woman with a distinctive transatlantic accent (“Wait until you hear her… sounds more RP than the ruddy Queen,” Stella’s colleague says) who has exacting standards – for herself most of all.
Is this what it is like to be inside Miss Plath’s mind? This rich exactitude, this precise point of intelligence, this controlled tempo. Each individual item considered, measured, selected.
It is focused, sharp, amusing. It holds your attention. It is precisely what a six-minute Features recording ought to be.
(Anyone curious to hear Plath’s voice firsthand, with its unique Massachusetts-English blend, can do so; there are numerous recordings on YouTube.)
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| The UK cover (Bloomsbury Circus, March 2026). Very different! |
Readers seeking in-depth views of Sylvia’s troubled marriage or creative process won’t find them here, but there are hints. Throughout the chapters, we’re immersed in Sylvia’s domestic side – at a dress shop, beside a local churchyard, at home as a salesman demonstrates a newfangled washing machine, at a riding lesson atop a horse called Ariel – and see her hopes for finding contentment and creative inspiration in the English countryside.
The reverse chronology means that The Daffodil Days ends on a poignant note of promise. Extensive prior knowledge of Sylvia Plath’s biography and works isn’t required. If you’re unfamiliar with all things Plath, you’ll miss some references within this beautifully subtle novel, but don’t be surprised if it also spurs new interest in her life and work.
The Daffodil Days appeared from Scribner/Simon & Schuster on June 9th. This is a significant expansion/reworking of my original (175-word) review for Booklist, which ran in their June 2026 issue.














