Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and "Birthday Letters": Alchemical Symbols of Transformation.Published in:2007By:Sugg, Richard P.Publication type:Essay
Imagining Ted Hughes: Authorship, Authenticity, and the Symbolic Work of "Collected Poems."Published in:2005By:Hibbett, RyanPublication type:Poetry Review
Secrets and Lies: Plath, Privacy, Publication and Ted Hughes's Birthday Letters.Published in:2001By:Churchwell, SarahPublication type:Poetry Review
from "Ted Hughes's Birthday Letters: Annotations and Commentary".Published in:Plath Profiles, 2010, v. 3, p. 192By:Kilfoil, KaraPublication type:Article
Scenes of Instruction: Representations of the American Girl in European Twentieth-Century Literature.Published in:2010By:Ahlberg, SofiaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Mourning Eurydice: Ted Hughes as Orpheus in Birthday Letters.Published in:2000By:Bundtzen, Lynda K.Publication type:Poetry Review
Double exposure: uses of photography in Ted Hughes's Birthday Letters.Published in:2008By:Döring, TobiasPublication type:Poetry Review
Refiguring Orpheus: the possession of the past in Ted Hughes' Birthday Letters.Published in:1999By:Whitehead, AnnePublication type:Literary Criticism
'Getting over our selves': Elegy and rhetoric in Ted Hughes's Birthday Letters and Carrie Etter's Imagined Sons.Published in:2019By:Dreyer, CathyPublication type:Book Review
Owning the facts of his life: Ted Hughes's Birthday Letters.Published in:1998By:Bere, CarolPublication type:Poetry Review
Sylvia Plath Hughes: The Middle Ground in the New Millennium.Published in:2006By:Matthews, Pamela R.Publication type:Book Review