Sylvia Plath’s Home
As I moved through the pages of the “Red Comet” by Heather Clark, I found myself drawn not only to the story of Slyvia Plath’s life but also to the familiar geography of her childhood.

Plath spent part of her early life in Wellesley, and her daily home still stands there today. Reading about her childhood experience in the town was familiar, as these are places I know well. It is easy to imagine the young Sylvia moving through the same neighborhoods, observing the world that would later shape her writing.

Clark’s biography brings extraordinary detail to Plath’s early years, her brilliance as a student, her love of language, and her complicated emotional landscape that influenced her work. Seeing those formative experiences set against the quiet New England backdrop of Wellesley adds another layer to the story. The ordinary streets and houses of the town become part of the early landscape that shaped one of the twentieth century’s most powerful literary voices.
History and literature live quietly around us. The houses we pass, the neighborhoods we walk through, and the towns we know have been the setting for remarkable lives and stories.
Read More From Nancy
The Toll House
I have driven by this house too many times to count and had not thought to learn more. The Toll House in Wellesley is one of those places that quietly sits in the background, until you take a moment to understand what it once was. Built in 1824 by Daniel Dadmun, one of the early tollkeepers on […]
Wellesley College
For more than 45 years, we have worked in the town of Wellesley. It is a town with a quiet identity, one that is not defined by industry or scale. Across the country, when people hear the name Wellesley, they often think first of one place: Wellesley College. Founded in 1870 by Henry Flwle Durant, […]
Town Hall
We first drove into Wellesley in 1981 while searching for office space. Without knowing what the building was, we both thought we were looking at a small castle of sorts. We soon learned it was the Wellesley Town Hall, and that discovery told us something important, this had to be a special town to invest in such […]