Book Review ~ The Bell Jar - Mental Illness, Identity and Isolation

@psyberkid · 2025-08-07 07:18 · Hive Book Club
Hello everyone, today I have a review of a classic masterpiece that has fascinated me a lot, **The Bell Jar** by **Sylvia Plath**, with an introduction by **Frances McCullough** and notes by **Lois Ames**. It is a novel that is a mixture of beauty and darkness, fiction and autobiography, emotion and brutal honesty. If you or someone you know is struggling with issues related to expectations and identity, this book will resonate with you. ![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmXR4ktA7TGWvVZk84GDxMFJkLVgjs7PpRmTpBuAkZx3Ek/copy_of_anime.png)   Story Summary   The story is about a young man who asks his boss for money to drink. The Bell Jar is the story of **Esther Greenwood** a bright, ambitious young woman who feels like she has the world at her fingertips. She lands an exclusive internship at a prestigious New York magazine and seems to be on her way to success. But behind the scenes, Esther is falling apart. Her inner sterility and stupidity do not match the sparkling lives of others. ![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmW7QkjyeAwWpjcWTNoQnQv7ycQuWv8YYmLwY8qcHKuBaT/woman_8286277_1280.jpg) As the story progresses through Sylvia Plath's lyrical poetry and raw prose, we see her slowly drifting towards despair. Esther's world becomes a prison and the world is like a bell jar, as Esther is confined, unable to feel and breathe air. Being a semi autobiographical novel, the words Plath writes reflect how she herself became mentally ill, under the pressures of her society and how a woman in the 1950s became constricted. The novel does not offer easy answers, but it honestly depicts the mental decline and the struggling steps of Esther's rehabilitation. ![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmQD4CJeMcJfUFu2vBAtYBQJjS5xvm8LyxV85pTm7ph9qv/fear_6562668_1280.png)   My Personal Thoughts   Reading **The Bell Jar** was like entering a stranger's diary, it was poetic, uncomfortable to read and so, so real. Sylvia Plath's writing is sharp. Every word is like a knife and every sentence is enough. Her emotional clarity about mental illness is chilling and decades ahead of its time. My strongest impression was the dichotomy the sparkling surface of Esther's life versus the emptiness of the inner world. Plath examines the silent pain and expectation beneath the laughter, especially for women who are grateful for the opportunities they are given and are expected to live up to. ![](https://images.ecency.com/DQmNYxctmvieARRg31ixb7QwkmXM2zRHLvAcuQVrKAtoFEq/typewriter_5469751_1280.png) Frances McCullough's introduction and Lois Ames's notes are very helpful, providing both historical and personal context that makes the book and Plath herself a much deeper experience to read. It's not a light read, but it made me take it as a must. It's an eye opener that despite success and talent, there can be a lot of indescribably excruciating pain, and that recovery is not impossible once you cross the fence of instability. That's it for now.

Thanks you so much for reading. See you next :)

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