The Visit
J**
Great play
It is a great play
L**S
Brilliant play
One of my favorite plots in a play.Former citizen of small town becomes richest woman in the world and comes back to destitute town to save them and give them a billion dollars, under one condition, they kill her former lover who drove her from town.Brilliant!
S**S
I didn't expect to, but I liked it.
This was a great story. I read it for a college course and I did not expect to like it. But I'm glad I had to read it, otherwise I never would found this book because it is not like the kind of books I seek out to read.
S**7
Thought Provoking
I first read this in college when I was studying European Literature and wanted to read it again. I really think Durrenmatt is on to something. When people say "It's not the money, it's the principal," it's actually usually about the money. This book examines that hypocrisy.
A**R
Always already...
A text to be re-read. Always. Antecipates what is underneath and must come to surface. But presents no closures. Ends as it started: with an interrogation. That what makes us go over and over its pages.
N**.
Five Stars
I love it. But I should have bought the hard cover .. Thank you
V**I
Excellent as described and promptly shipped
Excellent as described and promptly shipped
W**S
Love it
Awesome book
A**S
Breve pero contundente
Una obra de teatro, cercana al teatro del absurdo, que trata de manera sarcástica de cómo un pueblo, en nombre de unos valores, se olvida de los más importantes. Lectura breve y fácil, con mensaje potente.
L**N
I liked it!
Friedrich Dürrenmatt is a well regarded Swiss author and dramatist. His play The Visit was first premiered in Zurich in 1956. The actual title in German is Der Besuch der alten Dame, translating into The Visit of the Old Lady. I read it translated into English. The German version is highly thought of, and it is indeed often used as text for those studying German as a foreign language. The Visit has been performed internationally as a play, as a musical and even as an opera. There is also a much-altered film adaptation starring Ingrid Bergman.I approached The Visit cold. I did not try to find out anything much about it before hand. Why I chose The Visit, was firstly because my reading challenge needed a play. Secondly I was looking for something in German to vary the the language context. I found the book some months back, while preparing my reading list for 2019. The cold approach worked well, as thus I was able to form my own idea of the book.I knew it was a tragi-comedy. That is stated on the title page. Patrick Bowles, the translator describes it as a macabre parable in his foreword. The Visit is indeed funny, sad, macabre and tragical. There is death, fear, desires, submission, betrayal, power, weakness, wealth and poverty in it. As I was reading The Visit, it came to me that this was possibly allegorical. Yet Dürrenmatt makes a point of denying this in his postscript.We can, however, note that Dürrenmatt studied philosophy along with literature. Therefore he would have been aware of utilitarianism – and how the morally right choice is what is best for the majority. We also know that Dürrenmatt was politically active, and that he was a member of the left-wing club Gruppe Olten of Swiss writers. Then questions about the corruptibility of justice, the power of the wealthy, the effects of democratic decisions on the individual and the weakness of any man/woman become interesting.The Visit centers around two characters. Clare Zachanassian is now old. So is Afred Ill. Both remember times when they were young, beautiful, vibrant and in love. With each other. In Guellen, their small town. They also remember bought injustice and betrayal – something that took place between them as well as within the justice system of the town. And Clare has paid the price of it so far, and now she demands that Alfred too will pay. She has to the money to ask for it. It is not the first time Clare Zachanassian has taken justice in her hands with her money.I enjoyed The Visit. It entertained, but it also made me think. It reveals. It lays open. There is a sad undertone, as it is a dark comedy. The plot one can both see and not see at the same time. The discussion flows naturally and it is pertly multi staged at once. It is also interesting, how clearly Dürrenmatt describes the scenes. Scenes that one can visualize, yet wishes to see in actual productions. In varied interpretations in fact.
P**C
All Aboard
As dark as the theme of this play is, what would a whole society sacrifice for the sake of saving itself from poverty, despair and ultimate ruin, the story is hilarious. Durrenmatt is a bloody genius for cooking up this scheme, full of crazy characters with names rhyming with oby, some blind, some not, thugs, kooks, a prostitute turned billionairess leading lady with a peg leg and a penchant for husbands (9) and revenge (bigtime), numerous trains coming and going but never really stopping, and sad old Alfred Ill who set everything in motion many years ago, by doing his pregnant girlfriend wrong, really wrong.What really surprised me about The Visit was how close the slow falling apart of a small town in the playwright's time of fifty years ago or longer, echoes what's happening in Maritime towns of Canada right now. How far will we go to survive? Are we willing to sell our souls for a billion bucks? Read The Visit and find out, or better yet talk some director into rolling this steam engine of a play unto a stage near you. You won't be disappointed.
M**O
very good
Very good service and price. Delivery was on time and in perfect state. Definitely to recommend and to use in the future
S**E
Widely emotional
Brilliant play, completely captures the horrific and quick change of moods and feelings when a group of people are introduced to a large sum of money. It strangely makes you feel sorry and emotional for every single character by the end of the play.
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