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Tennessee Williams : Suddenly Last Summer.
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Author: Tennessee Williams
Title: Suddenly Last Summer.
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 72
Date: 1998-01
ISBN: 0822210940
Publisher: Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
Weight: 0.13 pounds
Size: 5.43 x 0.0 x 7.87 inches
Amazon prices:
$2.54used
$5.73new
$7.20Amazon
Previous givers: 1 Emily (USA: SC)
Previous moochers: 1 Kathryn (USA: TX)
Wishlists:
3rachel (USA: PA), mary jo (USA: NY), Tara (USA: PA).
Description: Product Description
The New York Herald-Tribune writes: "This, says Mr. Williams through the most sympathetic voice among his characters, is a true story about the time and the world we live in.' He has made it seem true - or at least curiously and suspense-fully possible - by the extraordinary skill with which he has wrung detail after detail out of a young woman who has lived with horror. [Catharine Holly], as a girl who has been the sole witness to her cousin's unbelievably shocking death, is brought into a 'planned jungle' of a New Orleans garden to confront a family that is intensely interested in having her deny the lurid tale she has told. The post-dilettante's mother is, indeed, so ruthlessly eager to suppress the facts that she had the girl incarcerated in a mental institution and she is perfectly willing, once she finishes her ritualistic five o'clock frozen daiquiri, to order the performance of a frontal lobotomy. A nun stands in rigid attendance; a doctor prepares a hypodermic to force the truth; greedy relatives beg her to recant in return for solid cash. Under the assorted, and thoroughly fascinating, pressures that are brought to bear, and under the intolerable, stammering strain of reliving her own memories, she slowly, painfully, hypnotically paints a concrete and blistering portrait of loneliness ... of the sudden snapping of that spider's web that is one man's life, of ultimate panic and futile flight. The very reluctance with which the grim, hopeless narrative is unfolded binds us to it; Mr. Williams threads it out with a spare, sure, sharply vivid control of language . . . and the spell is cast. " "Startling proof of what A man can do with words ... this brief withering play is a superb achievement." -The New York Times “A haunting spell that is virtually hypnotic in its compelling power." -The New York Post
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