categories

cart

Cart is empty
You've not logged in

O'Neill, Eugene : The iceman cometh

  • description
  • additional information
Tragedy in four acts by Eugene O'neill, written in 1939 and produced and published in 1946. Considered by many to be his finest work, the drama exposes the human need for illusion and hope as antidotes to the natural condition of despair. O'Neill mined the tragedies of his own life for this depiction of a ragged collection of alcoholics in a rundown New York tavern-hotel run by Harry Hope. The saloon regulars numb themselves with whiskey and make grandiose plans, but they do nothing. They await the arrival of big-spending Theodore Hickman ("Hickey"), who forces his cronies to pursue their much-discussed plans, hoping that real failure will make them face reality. Hickey finally confesses that he killed his long-suffering wife just hours before he arrived at Harry's, and he turns himself in to the police. The others slip back into an alcoholic haze, clinging to their dreams once more.
condition:
category: Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > Literature in English >
category: Books > Bestseller >
publisher: Vintage, 1999
item number / ISBN: 9780375709173
binding: paperback
pages: 196
language: English
Powered by Axio
Telefon:+36 1 317-50-23
E-mail:info@muzeumantikvarium.hu
Twitter
Twitter
Google+
Blogger
Pinterest
Youtube

cart

Cart is empty