Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Brothers of Thunder (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

Brothers of Thunder (NHB Modern Plays)

Ann Marie Di Mambro

Publisher: Nick Hern Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Anne Marie Di Mambro's play is about John, an HIV-positive man, who takes refuge with a Roman Catholic priest. A fragile relationship begins to develop between them until a figure from John's past arrives upon the scene. The conflict between them encompasses questions of forgiveness, reconciliation and the role of the church in the modern world. First staged at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, in 1994.
Available since: 04/03/2015.
Print length: 55 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Liberty Hall - cover

    Liberty Hall

    Michael O'Loughlin

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    Michael O'Loughlin was seven years old when the Irish trade union movement replaced its headquarters, Liberty Hall – the starting point of the 1916 Rising – with Ireland's first skyscraper. This bold, seventeen-storey Liberty Hall expressed an aspiration towards the modernity which its builders envisaged as the birthright of future generations. Since then, as one of Dublin's most iconic buildings, Liberty Hall has cast a personal and political light on the lives of citizens passing below, and formed the backdrop to O'Loughlin's earliest childhood memories.
    In this remarkable new book – a highly original fusion of poetry, visual images and prose memoirs – Liberty Hall becomes both a real and imaginary space, a physical building and a state of mind in which to be free; a place where the boundaries between verbal and visual, poetry and prose, past and present, city and suburb, local and global, all become fluid. It is a book of numerous journeys: the ritualised crossing of the Liffey from North to South and back again; travels around European cities; and into O'Loughlin's own family history in the first difficult century of the Irish state. He explores the emotional weather through memory, cinema and architecture, arriving in the end at Liberty Hall.
    Show book
  • Northern Moons - And the Hunt for an Artisan Quark - cover

    Northern Moons - And the Hunt...

    Rob Taylor

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    With fifty new, original poems, Northern Moons emerges as a continuum to Rob Taylor’s previous books. The spiritually-based essence of Taylor’s poetry speaks to the layers of consciousness that compose our soul. Each line is constructed (regardless of content or perceived context) as an inspiration for the reader to engage in a mindfulness approach to understanding the dynamics and worth of human influence across the spectrum of creation. The outcome of that effort is a greater capacity for love of each other and eventually cultivating a “human” community.
    Show book
  • Mrs G - cover

    Mrs G

    Mike Tibbetts

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    An unkempt man sits in a dingy and extremely untidy bedsit room. A half brick crashes through his window. Unsurprised, the man resignedly attempts to clear up the broken glass, succeeding only in cutting his hand. A knock at his door is unwelcome but persistent so he opens it to admit the bustling Mrs. G. who announces herself as the local cleaning lady. She saw the brick-throwing incident and wanted to know if the man was injured. Over the course of the audio drama Mrs. G. sets about clearing up the man’s flat and does her best to clear up his life, too. Tidying the flat is one thing, but bringing her idea of order to the man’s situation and thinking proves far more complex, despite her best efforts. Ultimately, for what she sees as the good of all concerned, she applies the final cleaning solution to the situation. After all, if you don’t deal with it effectively, dirt spreads.
    Show book
  • Speed of Life - cover

    Speed of Life

    Michael Strunge

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Michael Strunge was one of the key protagonists of the Danish 1980s poetry scene. Speed of Life was the first of 11 collections of poetry he published in a brief career, before ending his life aged 27. 
    Show book
  • Letter from Brooklyn - cover

    Letter from Brooklyn

    Jacob Scheier

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Having lived part time in Brooklyn for the past several years, Jacob Scheier's new poems are solidly rooted in Jewish New York life and examine love, loss, history, identity, protest, and popular culture. At the heart of Letter from Brooklyn is the notion that people understand who they are by where they have been. Everything is at once political and poetic, inseparable from intimate experience and personal heartbreak. Scheier moves from the inner worlds of grief and love to form a poetic dialectic between the familial and the historical. Whether eating in a knish restaurant on the Lower East Side or falling in and then out of love with the Brooklyn Bridge, or even being startled while biking down a prairie road, with depth and originality Scheier confronts the question of where home is and what it means amid private and public loss.
    Show book
  • Love's Labour's Lost - cover

    Love's Labour's Lost

    William Shakespeare

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This new edition of Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost presents a highly readable text of the play based on the first quarto of 1598. A thorough but concise critical commentary and a comprehensive introduction illuminate the significant elements of the play, its remarkable use of language, and its performance history.
    Show book