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135+ Werke 1,954 Mitglieder 14 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 8 Lesern

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Many American tourists who flock to the annual Ayckbourn offering in London's West End, think of Alan Ayckbourn as Great Britain's Neil Simon. The analogy holds true to the extent that the relationship between Ayckbourn's and Simon's plays illustrates the difference between British and American mehr anzeigen theater and audiences. Both writers capture the social machinations of middle-class characters in daily situations that are made compelling simply by the addition of clever but conventional plots, dramatic intrigues, twists, and discoveries. However, where Simon's plays tend to evolve into a condition of broad pathos or comedy, luxuriating in bittersweet melodrama, Ayckbourn's offerings revel in ever increasing intricacy, sharply incisive verbal dueling, and a dark social resonance that sounds much greater depths than in Simon's drama. Ayckbourn's scripts embody boggling challenges for directors and actors as well as audiences. Intimate Exchanges (1985), for example, a sequence of plays for ten characters played by only two actors, involves numerous moments when an actor chooses to send the script off on one of two alternative directions. The Norman Conquests (1975) typifies Ayckbourn's determination to squeeze as much as possible out of a dramatic construct. The trilogy's first play, Table Manners, offers a typical Ayckbourn scenario with family traumas played against each other in the constrained setting of a dining room. In the second and third plays, Living Together and Round and Round the Garden, the audience is exposed to simultaneous layers of action that occur in two other venues, the living room and garden, when characters are not onstage in the dining room. Each play makes sense on its own, but the trilogy taken as a whole embodies a vision of this family that is larger than the sum of the individual parts. Aychbourn has also been known for rather experimental staging. The Way Upstream (1982), for example, is set on and around a boat and requires flooding the stage. Ayckbourn's later plays reflect a bleak vision of society. In Woman in Mind (1985) and Henceforward (1987), Aychbourn's characters have become increasingly complex, and he reveals himself as an intense social commentator. Other recent plays include It Could Be Any One of Us (1983), Man of the Moment (1990), and Body Language (1991). Since the 1970s, Ayckbourn has written at least one play a season; the premieres are always at a small local theater that he runs in the resort town of Scarborough. 020 (Bowker Author Biography) Alan Ayckbourn is the author of more than fifty plays, many of which are available from Faber. He lives in England. (Bowker Author Biography) weniger anzeigen
Bildnachweis: Alan Ayckbourn Photo: Michael Winner

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Werke von Alan Ayckbourn

Woman in Mind: December Bee (1986) 80 Exemplare
Confusions (1677) 75 Exemplare
Communicating Doors (1995) 73 Exemplare
Absurd Person Singular (1972) 71 Exemplare
A Small Family Business (1987) 56 Exemplare
Comic Potential. (1999) 47 Exemplare
Relatively Speaking (1968) 45 Exemplare
Season's Greetings (1980) 41 Exemplare
House & Garden: Two Plays (2000) 39 Exemplare
A Chorus of Disapproval (1740) 36 Exemplare
The Revengers' Comedies (1977) 33 Exemplare
Joking Apart and Other Plays (1979) 31 Exemplare
Henceforward (1988) 30 Exemplare
Invisible Friends (1991) 24 Exemplare
Taking Steps: a Farce (1644) 24 Exemplare
Freunde in der Not (1974) 21 Exemplare
Things We Do For Love (1998) 20 Exemplare
Time of my life (1993) 19 Exemplare
Mr. A's Amazing Maze Plays (1989) 16 Exemplare
Wildest Dreams (1993) 13 Exemplare
Way Upstream (Acting Edition) (1983) 11 Exemplare
Joking Apart (1979) 11 Exemplare
Tons of money : a farce (1988) 11 Exemplare
The Divide (2019) 10 Exemplare
Boy Who Fell into a Book (2000) 7 Exemplare
Improbable fiction : a comedy (2007) 7 Exemplare
Snake in the Grass: A Play (2004) 7 Exemplare
By Jeeves: Original 1996 London Cast Recording (1996) — Lyricist — 7 Exemplare
Living Together (1975) 6 Exemplare
Sweet Revenge [1998 movie] (1998) — Writer — 6 Exemplare
Mixed Doubles (Acting Edition) (1970) 6 Exemplare
By Jeeves 5 Exemplare
Round and Round the Garden (1975) 5 Exemplare
If I Were You (2011) 4 Exemplare
Whenever (2002) 4 Exemplare
Flatspin (2002) 4 Exemplare
Callisto 5 : a play (1995) 4 Exemplare
Family circles : a comedy (1997) 4 Exemplare
A Word from Our Sponsor (1998) 4 Exemplare
Roleplay (2002) 4 Exemplare
A cut in the rates : a play (1991) 4 Exemplare
The Champion of Paribanou (2000) 3 Exemplare
The Jollies (2002) 3 Exemplare
Orvin: Champion of Champions (2003) 3 Exemplare
Casa i jardí, Jardí (2005) 3 Exemplare
Wolf at the door : a play (1993) 3 Exemplare
Casa i Jardí - CASA (2005) 3 Exemplare
The Norman Conquests [1977 mini series] (2011) — Screenwriter — 3 Exemplare
Body language : a play (2001) 3 Exemplare
My Wonderful Day (2011) 2 Exemplare
Drowning on Dry Land (2006) 2 Exemplare
Alan Ayckbourn: Plays 4 (2011) 2 Exemplare
Neighbourhood Watch (2013) 2 Exemplare
The Alan Ayckbourn collection (2011) 2 Exemplare
Sugar Daddies (2013) 2 Exemplare
Stücke (1994) 2 Exemplare
Private Fears in Public Places (2019) 2 Exemplare
Gameplan (2004) 2 Exemplare
Mr. Whatnot : a comedy (1992) 2 Exemplare
Gizmo : a play (2000) 2 Exemplare
My sister Sadie (2003) 2 Exemplare
Absurd 1 Exemplar
Making Tracks 1 Exemplar
The Forest 1 Exemplar
A Brief History of Women (2021) 1 Exemplar
Master of his Art 1 Exemplar
Herzen 1 Exemplar
TAGS, Absurd Person Singular (2001) 1 Exemplar
Surprises (2012) 1 Exemplar
Interactions: A Collection (2012) 1 Exemplar
Cheap & Cheerful 1 Exemplar
A Talk in the Park 1 Exemplar
Garden 1 Exemplar
House (2003) 1 Exemplar
Verwarringen 1 Exemplar
Bedside story 1 Exemplar
Trap op, trap af 1 Exemplar
Beste wensen 1 Exemplar
Gosforth's Fete 1 Exemplar
Between Mouthfuls 1 Exemplar
Haunting Julia (2018) 1 Exemplar
Mother Figure 1 Exemplar
Drinking Companion 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Moving Parts: Monologues from Contemporary Plays (1992) — Mitwirkender — 57 Exemplare
Best Plays of the Seventies (1980) — Mitwirkender — 11 Exemplare
Who Was Betty?: A Whimsical Collection of Tall Stories (2011) — Mitwirkender — 7 Exemplare

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One of my very favorites.
 
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deliriumshelves | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 14, 2024 |
A waste of time. The book is about grief and love, but it's so boring. I didn't care for the writing style. I'm assuming the translator took care to preserve the original Japanese style, though it's possible the translation is not very good.
 
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RachelRachelRachel | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 21, 2023 |
Years ago a plague almost wiped out humanity and left all surviving females as carriers and all males as vulnerable to it. There had never been a cure - so the only way for the world to survive was to segregate the genders - women in the south, men in the north, no contact between them. Except for the pesky problem of pro-creation but artificial insemination takes care of that and when a boy is born, he is not vulnerable until puberty (or thereabouts) so a protocol had been created to ensure that boys are protected and move to the North when their time comes. Or so everyone believed. 50 years after the fall of the Divide, the novelist Soween Clay-Flin decides to tell the story of the fall of the Divide.

Using journal entries to tell a story has one big problem - the person whose diary is used is never there for everything. So instead of trying to work around that with author notes, the novel uses multiple sources - Soween's diary, her brother's Elihu's diary and the newspaper and council notes of the time. Elihu is one of the very few boys born into the all-female society - which allows both diaries to show the world from the eyes of both growing kids. The additional articles and extracts from official documentation and correspondence add the missing pieces in a story that leads to a place noone expects.

As women are the carriers and the plague kills any man in 10 days, the new order had convinced the women that they are responsible for the fall and enforces strict rules of behavior. And somehow the women at these times accepted it -- we never learn the full story of how the Divide came to be - we get the story as taught to the kids but even there, things don't always make sense. That separation of the genders also changes the idea of what is a normal relationship -- man/woman unions lead to death so they do not exist. Until Elihu falls in love that is.

It is obvious early in the novel that something is not right (and we know that the Divide is about to fall) - there are subtle clues here and there that the kids are not taught the whole story. Just how much of it they are not taught becomes clearer and clearer in time although the actual state of the world is revealed slowly and with a lot of red herrings along the way. And the end is heart breaking - even if the (in universe) foreword makes it clear that this is not a happy love story (if someone wants to read that as Romeo and Juliet in a post-apocalypses world, they won't be far off), the end hits hard. It is partially because all the earlier misdirection - Ayckbourn weaves a tale that makes you expect things to work out at the end. And they do - although not for everyone.

I am not sure what sounded scarier - the world as we saw it from the eyes of the two growing children or the world as we finally realized it to be later in the story. I would not want to live in either.

I liked this novel a lot more than I expected. The formatting (different fonts for each element) and the setup makes it look a bit weird but after reading it, I cannot imagine it being done any other way. If I have one issue with it, it is that I wish we had seen a lot more from the pre-history and from what exactly happened around the fall - the parts we saw were limited to what happened to our characters so it was never made clear how much of what everyone was taught was really the truth. Although the hints are there and maybe a summation is not really needed.
… (mehr)
½
3 abstimmen
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AnnieMod | Jan 13, 2020 |
For Murakami fans, this will be a disappointment, of course. Plenty of heartbreak and whimsy, but not much for overall structure or continuity. I think the translation was a bit inelegant. Worth the day it took to read, though.
 
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Eoin | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 3, 2019 |

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