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Paperback Other Places: Three Plays: A Kind of Alaska; Victoria Station; Family Voices Book

ISBN: 0802151892

ISBN13: 9780802151896

Other Places: Three Plays: A Kind of Alaska; Victoria Station; Family Voices

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Book jacket/back: When this triptich of new plays by Harold Pinter opened in London in October 1982 it was celebrated by critics and audiences alike as an electrifying theatrical event that confirmed once again the author's undisputed place in the forefront of today's dramatists. "The first two plays in 'Other Places' are strange, comic, ansd fascinating, but you would know they were Pinter if you met them in yoru dreams. However, the third play, 'A Kind of Alaska,' (which strikes me on instant acquaintance as a masterpiece) moves one in a way no work of his has ever done before...Never before have I Known a Pinter play to leave one so emotionally wrung through." Michael Billington, The Guardian. "Harold Pinter is writing at the top of his powers...It has taken some of us time to learn Pinter's language. He was never less obscure than here, or more profoundly eloquent about the fragile joy of being alive." --John Barber, The Daily Telegraph In "A Kind of Alaska," a middle-aged woman wakes up after nearly thirty years passed in a coma induced by sleeping sickness. "Victoria Station" is a hilarious nocturnal dialogue on a car radio between a lost taxi driver and his controller; "Family Voices," originally broadcast as a radio play and subsequently presented in a "platform performance," is a set of parallel monologues in the form of letters which a mother, son and father may have written to each other but never exchanged.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

An excellent, haunting collection.

Harold Pinter uses silence like a visual artist uses negative space. He uses it as the framework around which to place his stunning, sparse dialogue. The three short plays in this collection are some of his best. The first one, `Family Voices', tells the story of a dysfunctional family indirectly through letters they send to each other. The second play, `One for the Road' is a tense, suspenseful piece set in an oppressive police state. The last work in the collection, `A Kind of Alaska' features a woman waking from a coma after three decades and dealing with the fact that she is no longer a teenager.The above descriptions don't do justice to the complexity in each play. Pinter is able to express multiple levels with very few words and simple sets. Not only have I read each of these plays, I have seen them performed and I have acted in them. The experience is nearly as intense no matter how you encounter them. This collection, in particular, does a good job of presenting the works. The words are clear and easy to read and the dialogue is well-spaced. I can recommend this collection to any fan of unusual, gripping theater.
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