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Book Reviews of The HomecomingBook Review: All good Summary: 5 Stars
Book came nicely shrink wrapped and (for some reason) in two envelopes. Excellent condition. Very kindly they sent US MAIL to Hawai'i. Media mail can take up to two months (it really does come by boat!)
Book Review: Bizzare, Yet Intriguing Summary: 4 Stars
This is my favorite play thus far in life. Beware of the profoun PINTER PAUSE which he is famous for within the play. Don't give up on the plot, it only gets more unsual as the story progresses. It will absolutely get your mind rolling, and it is very possible that you will not find any answers to the questions the book arises. This is a very mind boggling play that is filled with anger, love, sex, family relationships, murder, and the list continues. There is something in it for everyone!!
Book Review: Family Reunion to Avoid Summary: 4 Stars
Pinter at his darkest and most experimental. This play's first and second acts are of equal length down to the line. Sexual deviance, abuse, name calling, assault and torture: these are the norm. These people make the rest of our families seem pretty good. The play is twisted and as much a psychological journey as anything else. Pinter lives up the claim that his plays were like, "Beckett in doors," with this one. Though most of Pinter's plays have a dark edge to them, this one may even cross over the line, if you are paying close attention to what is really going on. Worth reading at least twice, after the shock from the first time through, the second read (if read closely), becomes even darker and more forbidding. Wonderfully written, and further proof that Pinter is one of the masters of modern British drama.
Book Review: Home is where the heart is Summary: 5 Stars
5 stars going on 10. It will take me weeks to digest this one. Little bit of a surprise, eh? So Pinter is not just a political campaigner.
The quality of the dialogue knocked me off my feet. Conventions seem well-established but aren't quite the expected conventions. The family is close but not quite the expected closeness. This is hardly a dysfunctional family: it's just a family not functioning as you might have been taught a family should.
I recently watched the 1973 American Film Theatre performance of this play on VHS. Vivian Merchant, who also starred in the American Film Theatre's version of Jean Genet's "The Maids", plays Ruth in "The Homecoming". How to expect a better cast? In the hands of those incredible actors, this play slammed into me. It will take me days to find suitable words to describe what hit me. Unlike the plays of Pinter's friend Beckett, "The Homecoming" can't be dismissed as Theatre of the Absurd. Not that there isn't absurdity, but that Pinter works hard to interwine it with familiar daily routines.
No boring moments. At the beginning the hostilities seemeed contrived but very soon a lot more was going on. Most of us aren't as creative as this family in finding a way to make the family work ... and most of us probably wouldn't want to be. But they are close and not just because of what they share during this visit. The father especially struck me as rising above his angers to find a love (however unconventional) for his sons and that warmth became unmistakeable as the play progressed. No? Well, something special is going on in "The Homecoming" and I'll probably need many passes to understand what it is. But, with such rich dialogue, many passes seem warranted.
Book Review: It creeps up on you, it does. Summary: 4 Stars
Harold Pinter, The Homecoming (Grove, 1965)
I spent the first act of this effort from our most recent Nobel Prize winner for literature thinking "my, this is all well and good, but what is it about this play that had everyone telling me this needs to be the first Pinter I read?" Then came act two, and I understood it.
The Homecoming starts off (as you might expect given that first paragraph) unassumingly enough; a man and his wife of six years return to his ancestral home. His brothers, uncle, and father live there, and are meeting his wife for the first time; the brothers, roustabouts both of them, act a bit oddly (well, actually, a bit naturally) around the wife at first, but there's nothing terribly out of the ordinary. In fact, there's a surprising lack of family tension; the normally prickly father welcomes his wayward son home with open arms.
Then, of course, everything goes to pot in the most entertaining manner possible. I have spent years reading thousands of volumes wondering why it is that everyone has to over-emote; The Homecoming is the absolute, perfect antithesis, and I spent the entire second act wishing that these characters inhabited at least half the novels I've read in the past decade. They're deliciously perverse, and so very deadpan about it. Now, while Pinter is busy creating these characters and putting them into interesting situations (and the situations are interesting enough that the entire play can take place in a single room), he's offering some excellent satire on the family dynamic, but Pinter is talented enough to let the satire speak for itself while he concentrates on the story at hand, the mark of a man who knows how to write.
This is very good stuff, and I'll definitely be diving farther into Pinter in the coming years. *** ½
More The Homecoming reviews: 1 2 3
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