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   Book Info

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Beckett: Waiting for Godot  
Author: Samuel Beckett
ISBN: 0521549388
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


Book Description
Waiting for Godot has become one of the most frequently discussed and influential plays in the history of the theater. This volume presents a comprehensive critical study of Samuel Beckett's first and most renowned dramatic work. Lawrence Graver discusses the play's background and provides a detailed analysis of its originality and distinction as a landmark of modern theatrical art. He also reviews some of the differences between Beckett's original French version and his English translation.




Beckett: Waiting for Godot

FROM THE PUBLISHER

This volume offers a comprehensive critical study of Samuel Beckett's first and most renowned dramatic work, Waiting for Godot, which has become one of the most frequently discussed and influential plays in the history of the theatre. Lawrence Graver discusses the play's background and provides a detailed analysis of its originality and distinction as a landmark of modern theatrical art. He reviews some of the differences between Beckett's original French version and his English translation, and discusses the liberating influence of Waiting for Godot on such important playwrights as Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

In counterpoint to Beckett's plays, novels and poems is the equally brilliant shorter prose-the stories, soliloquies and depersonalized monologues he wrote throughout his career. Here, collected and edited by the editor of On Beckett: Essays and Criticism, are all three-dozen instances of that prose, only some of which have appeared previously in books; one story, ``The Cliff,'' is debuting here. The earlier entries indicate Beckett's uneasy apprenticeship before he found his voice and a matching style. The Joycean logorrhea of ``Sedento and Quiescendo'' (later part of Dream of Fair to Middling Women) and the conventional narration of ``A Case in a Thousand'' don't achieve much in themselves. Still, as with ``Assumption,'' the earliest piece here, they display the stirrings of a genius that would take shape in the stories of 1946 and in Texts for Nothing, as in Waiting for Godot. Some of the stories-``The End''; ``The Expelled''; ``First Love''; ``The Calmative''-are acknowledged short masterpieces, meandering Cartesian misadventures of minds and bodies stumbling over one another. In later works, Beckett can be seen tracing the further patterns of a mind narrating its disintegration (the ``skull alone in a dark place''), as in ``Imagination Dead Imagine,'' ``Ping'' and a series of eight pieces called ``Fizzles.'' Elsewhere, in ``From an Abandoned Work'' and ``Enough,'' the author's wanderers are curtailed, his ``Lost Ones'' vainly searching a cylindrical prison for an exit, his aged narrators tramping through their memories. In the closing ``Stirrings Still,'' written at age 82, Beckett refines and intermingles these elements in a despairing, delightful voice that struggles with what its owner called its ``obligation to express.'' Despite some juvenilia and curiosa, this is an invaluable one-volume addition to the Beckett shelf. (Jan.)

Library Journal

Nobel Prize winner Beckett's prose, most especially his stories, historically have taken a back seat to his theatrical works and poetry. The works in this collection, eloquent distillations of the writer's ideas, clearly demonstrate how unfortunate this oversight has been. To be fair, however, the complex publishing history-wherein some stories were published in a variety of collections, while others appeared only in journals, and still others were grouped in poetry or drama collections-and the adaptation of many of these works for stage or radio contributed to the lack of a cohesive understanding of Beckett's legacy. In addition to bringing these scattered works together, Beckett scholar Gontarski (editor of The Beckett Studies Reader, Univ. Pr. of Florida, 1993, among others) goes to great lengths to explain the genesis of the pieces in an introduction offering historical context and in copious notes and appendixes. While libraries may already hold most of these works, this work is well worth the investment for its comprehensive approach. Recommended for all collections.-Eric Bryant, "Library Journal"

     



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