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Victoria K. Walker's avatar

I loved this, thanks Kate. I’ve seen the film, but haven’t read the book - to my shame! I began studying film at O Level and saw it through to post-graduate level and one of my favourite early courses was ‘Film, Femininity and the Female Experience’. It’s a while since I’ve watched The Hours, so it’s definitely time for another viewing. I hope you’re having a fab weekend!

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Kathryn Vercillo's avatar

The Hours is on my list to both read and watch and I'm not sure why I haven't done so before now but this reminds me that I want to.

I find it so interesting when books take people from different points of history and meld them together. I recently read The Last Confessions of Sylvia P. and although it's not quite the same, it has a similar format:

"It is a fictional story rooted in a lot of historical autobiography that is told through the lens of three different characters, alternating viewpoints by chapter. 1) Estee is an entirely fictional present-day museum curator who has been given a handwritten copy of The Bell Jar that nobody ever knew existed. 2) Boston Rhodes is a poet based on Anne Sexton who was in a poetry class with Sylvia Plath around the time of the writing of the Bell Jar. Through her we learn a lot about both women’s experiences with depression, balancing motherhood and creativity, and being a female in the male-dominated poet world of the time. 3) And Ruth Barnhouse is a psychiatrist working with Sylvia Plath while she’s in McLean, an autobiographical experience that informed The Bell Jar and therefore the murky bridge between fact and fiction within the book.

https://createmefree.substack.com/p/the-last-confessions-of-sylvia-p

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