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
The Cord (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

The Cord (NHB Modern Plays)

Bijan Sheibani

Publisher: Nick Hern Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Ash and Anya were happy, just the two of them. Then the baby came.
Ash has spent the first two weeks of his son's life trying to work out where he fits. He watches his mother holding her grandchild for the first time, mesmerised by the mystery and delight of a new life. After she leaves, Ash watches Anya feeding their son – so close, almost intertwined.
As sleepless nights, relentless crying and hushed arguments take their toll, a storm starts to grow as a chasm widens between Ash and his son, his wife and even his own mother.
Lifting the roof off one family's home, The Cord is a brutally honest and moving insight into the challenging truths of family dynamics. It premiered at the Bush Theatre, London, in 2024, written and directed by Bijan Sheibani.
'Daringly original… has the tinge of lived experience… excellent on the fractious micro-aggressions that can abruptly blossom into furious rows between a couple juggling what is simultaneously the wondrous, commonplace and often brain-destroying reality of new parenthood… feels instantly recognisable and true' - Telegraph
'Acutely observed and often searingly familiar… a valuable piece not just for any new parent or grandparent, but for anyone navigating current relationships through the ghosts of past ones… feels both universal and deeply personal, highlighting a rarely-spoken truth of parenting: children have a way of finding us out' - WhatsOnStage
'Powerfully intimate and highly relatable… very well-observed: it feels like a fly-on-the-wall documentary of the blurry first few months of being a parent. It nails the exhaustion, the rows, the anxiety, the joy – and the slow tectonic realisation that the parent you will be is not necessarily the one you want to be, and is coloured, shadowed, by the baby you were… sensitive and intelligent' - Time Out
'Tackles the under-explored topic of male post-partum depression with bravery and nuance' - The Stage
Available since: 04/24/2024.
Print length: 88 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Poetry of Claude McKay - A pioneer of black poetry and a founder of the Harlem Renaissance - cover

    The Poetry of Claude McKay - A...

    Claude McKay

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Festus Claudius McKay was born in Sunny Ville, Jamaica on the 15th September 1890, He was the youngest son to parents who had gathered enough assets to secure them the right to vote. 
     
    As a boy he was fascinated by English Poetry and literature, although at 17 he took on work as an apprentice woodcutter for two years before becoming a police constable in the capital, Kingston.  In this mainly white and affluent town racism was rife and its nature awakened his political instincts and pursuit of social justice.  He soon returned home and published his first two poetry collections in 1912. 
     
    By the early 1920’s he had travelled extensively across the United States and parts of Europe and was recognised as a very talented poet and an essential founding component of the Harlem Renaissance.   
     
    As well as poetry he also wrote several novels and was a dedicated activist for social reform.  
     
    By the late 1930s he had developed a deep interest in Catholicism and several years later moved to Chicago as a teacher for a Catholic organisation. 
     
    By the mid 1940’s several illnesses has further debilitated his health. 
     
    Claude McKay died of heart failure on the 22nd May 1948.  He was 57.
    Show book
  • Short Poetry Collection 092 - cover

    Short Poetry Collection 092

    Various Various

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    This is a collection of poems recorded by LibriVox volunteers for the month of November 2010.
    Show book
  • Maid of Maiden Lane - cover

    Maid of Maiden Lane

    Amelia E. Barr

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Maid of Maiden lane is a wonderful love story in which Mrs. Barr intertwines the hot political and social issues that were occurring in America during the last decade of the 18th century with an excellent love story plot. Some of those issues include: the moral dilemma and debate over the French Revolution, and how that event touched the lives of the immigrants in America; the prejudices between the immigrants from England, and those from France or Holland, and how those animosities affected the ordinary lives of the people; and the political debate over titles, foreign policy, and such things(for example)as where the capital of the nation was to reside, New York or Philadelphia. The author gives us a picture of New York City that is vastly different from today, with it's residential areas and tree lined roads as the backdrop for this very interesting drama. Cornelia, the Maiden of Maiden lane, is loved by two young men. Who she chooses, and the obstacles that the two face because of the opposition of their fathers, friends, and a huge mistake that turns everything upside down, propels the story towards its climax, where a surprise character, spiritual in nature, comes to the rescue, while sacrificing her own desire for love to help the two lovers. Good character, love, and the family ties and relationships that existed during those times are very well portrayed by the author, and the book is as interesting from a historical point of view as it is from a truly interesting and sweet old fashioned love story. (Summary by Robert Hoffman)Cast: 
    Narrators: Tiffany Halla Colonna and Beth ThomasCornelia Moran: GraceGeorge Hyde: Chuck WilliamsonArenta Van Ariens: Amanda FridayAva Moran: CaprishaPageAnnie Hyde: Victoria MartinAunt Angelica: Elizabeth KlettRichard Hyde: Ron AltmanKate Hyde: MJ FranckJoris Van Heemskirk: Algy PugLysbet Van Heemskirk: Kristin GjerløwJohn Moran:  Robert HoffmanRem Van Ariens: Michael ReussPeter Van Ariens: David LawrenceJacobus Van Ariens: ToddHWan Englishman: Beth ThomasJohn Adams: ToddHWMrs. Adams: April GonzalesMrs. Smith: KateCThomas Jefferson: Ken GarrettMrs. Wiley: KateCMary Damer: Charlotte DuckettAnthony Clymer: Nathanial W.C. HigginsDoctor Roslyn: Nathanial W.C. HigginsCaptain Jacobus: Nathanial W.C. HigginsProoflisteners: <a href="h
    Show book
  • Ricocheting Regrets - Sadness in my Positivity - cover

    Ricocheting Regrets - Sadness in...

    Joseph Batte

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Appreciate a rare genre: Twenty-four poetic short stories, embedded with sparks of life drama and humor, based on a true life story. Extreme imagery is used, in some of the stories, to entice further thinking, enabling one to tap deeper, into their inner most subconscious. Better capture underlying life insights...
    Show book
  • Under the Broom Tree - cover

    Under the Broom Tree

    Natalie Homer

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Poems that explore the wilderness in order to find rest and divine providence. In the story of the prophet Elijah, he must flee his home, and, after an arduous journey, he arrives under a broom tree, where he prays for his own death. But in his sleep, he is touched by an angel who provides food and water. In this moment, the broom tree becomes a symbol for shelter in a barren landscape, a portent of hope and renewal.Drawing inspiration from this tale, Natalie Homer’s debut poetry collection is a trek through the wildernesses of the heart and of the natural world. Exploring the idea of divine providence, Homer finds seams of light opening between forlorn moments and locates, “Something to run a finger through, / something to shine in the ocher light.” Within these narrow spaces, Homer explores themes of longing, home, family, and self-worth amidst the wondrous backdrop of the American West and the Rust Belt, while integrating a rich mythology of narrative, image, and association. The broom tree, offering the capacity for shade and respite, becomes a source of connection and an inspiration for the collection. It is an invitation to sink deep into the earth and self and feel the roots entwine.
    Show book
  • The Poetry of Herman Merville - cover

    The Poetry of Herman Merville

    Herman Melville

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Herman Melville was born in New York City on August 1st, 1819, the third of eight children.   
     
    At the age of 7 Melville contracted scarlet fever which was to permanently diminish his eyesight.   
    At this time Melville was described as being "very backwards in speech and somewhat slow in comprehension." 
     
    His father died when he was 12 leaving the family in very straitened times. Just 14 Melville took a job in a bank paying $150 a year that he obtained via his uncle, Peter Gansevoort, who was one of the directors of the New York State Bank. 
     
    After a failed stint as a surveyor he signed on to go to sea and travelled across the Atlantic to Liverpool and then on further voyages to the Pacific on adventures which would soon become the architecture of his novels.  Whilst travelling he joined a mutiny, was jailed, fell in love with a South Pacific beauty and became known as a figure of opposition to the coercion of native Hawaiians to the Christian religion.   
     
    He drew from these experiences in his books Typee, Omoo, and White-Jacket. These were published as novels, the first initially in London in 1846. 
     
    By 1851 his masterpiece, Moby Dick, was ready to be published.  It is perhaps, and certainly at the time, one of the most ambitious novels ever written.   However, it never sold out its initial print run of 3,000 and Melville’s earnings on this masterpiece were a mere $556.37. 
     
    In succeeding years his reputation waned and he found life increasingly difficult.  His family was growing, now four children, and a stable income was essential.   
     
    With his finances in a disappointing state Melville took the advice of friends that a change in career was called for.  For many others public lecturing had proved very rewarding.  From late 1857 to 1860, Melville embarked upon three lecture tours, where he spoke mainly on Roman statuary and sightseeing in Rome.  
     
    In 1876 he was at last able to publish privately his 16,000 line epic poem Clarel. It was to no avail.  The book had an initial printing of 350 copies, but sales failed miserably. 
     
    On December 31st, 1885 Melville was at last able to retire.  His wife had inherited several small legacies and provide them with a reasonable income. 
     
    Herman Melville, novelist, poet, short story writer and essayist, died at his home on September 28rh 1891 from cardiovascular disease.
    Show book