The Real Inspector Hound and Other Plays

Culled from nearly 20 years of the playwright's career, a showcase for Tom Stoppard's dazzling range and virtuosic talent, The Real Inspector Hound and Other Plays is essential reading for fans of modern drama. The plays in this collection reveal Stoppard's sense of fun, his sense of theater, his sense of the absurd, and his gifts for parody and satire. They include The Real Inspector Hound, After Margritte, Dirty Linen, New-Found-Land, Dogg's Hamlet, and Cahoot's Macbeth.
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Bleodsian

Desperate situations give rise to desperate means. When Richard Cacciare is diagnosed with a terminal illness, a mysterious voice only he can hear gives him an unorthodox and violent plan to restore his health.When impoverished, middle-aged janitor Richard Cacciare is diagnosed with a terminal, hematological illness, he falls into despair. His spirits are revived, however, when a voice only he can hear dictates a plan to restore his health at the expense of others. The Voice states life is NOT sacred and health can be restored when consuming the blood of others. Mr. Cacciare then embarks on a sacrilegious murdering spree, killing victims and bottling their blood. Will this plan actually succeed? How long and how far will Mr. Cacciare go to prolong his life, and will the Voice allow him to stop?
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Collected Poems in English and French

Here is the first complete collection in print of all poetry by the Nobel Prize-winning writer Samuel Beckett. The volume contains the English poems--including Whoroscope, his first published verse. In addition, there are the dozen poems in French in which he wrote in 1938 and 1939.
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Every Good Boy Deserves Favor & Professional Foul

It is Tom Stoppard's very special skill as the master comedian of ideas in the modern theater to create brilliant, biting humor out of serious concerns. Virtually assaulting the audience with a cascade of words and a conspicuous display of intellect, Stoppard, in "Every Good Boy Deserves Favor," contrasts the circumstances of a political prisoner and a mental patient in a Soviet insane asylum, to question the difference, if any, between free will and the freedom to conform. The situation, in which the mental patient "hears" an orchestra, is both chilling and funny as we are introduced to two men who happen to share the same name, are in carcerated in the same cell, and are attended by the same doctor.
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Letters of T.S. Eliot: 1898-1922

Eliot's correspondence from his childhood in St. Louis until he had settled in England and published The Waste Land. Edited and with an Introduction by Valerie Eliot; Index; photographs.
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Lord Malquist & Mr. Moon: A Novel

Review “A beautiful, funny novel.” –New Republic.“Clever, amusing, diverting…” –New York Times“Zany, aphoristic and flashy… a remarkable entertainment, remarkably funny.” –Washington Post“This bizarre carnival of a first novel is written with the same rapier-like wit that distinguishes Mr. Stoppard’s hit play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead…” –Publishers Weekly“The pace of the romp never slackens, and the fusillade of puns, travesty, parody, double entendres is rapid… Stoppard’s talent as an entertainer is certain and brilliant.” –Vogue Magazine Product Description Tom Stoppard’s first novel, originally published in 1966 just before the premiere of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, is an uproarious fantasy set in modern London. The cast includes a penniless, dandified Malquist with a liveried coach; Malquist’s Boswellian biographer, Moon, who frantically scribbles as a bomb ticks in his pocket; a couple of cowboys, one being named Jasper Jones; a lion who’s banned from the Ritz; an Irishman on a donkey claiming to be the Risen Christ; and three irresistible women.
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