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 James Plays (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

The James Plays (NHB Modern Plays)

Rona Munro

Publisher: Nick Hern Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Rona Munro's vividly imagined trilogy brings to life three generations of Stewart kings who ruled Scotland in the tumultuous fifteenth century.

James I: The Key Will Keep the Lock explores the complex character of the colourful Stewart King - poet, lover and law-maker.

Captured at the age of 13 and crowned King of Scots in an English prison, James I of Scotland is delivered home 18 years later with a ransom on his head and a new English bride. The nation he returns to is poor: the royal coffers empty and his nobles ready to tear him apart at the first sign of weakness. Determined to bring the rule of law to a land riven by warring factions, James faces terrible choices if he is to save himself, his Queen and the crown.

James II: Day of the Innocents depicts a violent royal playground from the perspective of the child King and his contemporaries, in a terrifying arena of sharp teeth and long knives.

James II becomes the prize in a vicious game between Scotland's most powerful families. Crowned when only six, abandoned by his mother and separated from his sisters, the child King is little more than a puppet. There is only one friend he can trust: William, the future Earl of Douglas. As James approaches adulthood in an ever more threatening world, he must fight to keep his tenuous grip on the crown while the nightmares of his childhood rise up once more.

James III: The True Mirror, like the King himself, is colourful and unpredictable, turning its attention to the women at the heart of the royal court.

Charismatic, cultured, and obsessed with grandiose schemes that his nation can ill afford, James III is by turns loved and loathed. Scotland thunders dangerously close to civil war, but its future may be decided by James' resourceful and resilient wife, Queen Margaret of Denmark. Her love and clear vision can save a fragile monarchy and rescue a struggling people.

Each play stands alone as a unique vision of a country tussling with its past and future; viewed together the trilogy creates an intricate and compelling narrative on Scottish culture and nationhood, full of playful wit and boisterous theatricality.

The James Plays premiered at the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, in August 2014 as part of the Edinburgh International Festival, before transferring to the National Theatre, London. The trilogy was named Best New Play at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards 2014.

'a towering achievement... a modern classic' - Evening Standard

'an astonishing dramatic achievement... Munro's script is the star... a feast of theatrical might and blistering emotion' - Telegraph

'full of topical resonance... These are unequivocally plays for today... Munro skilfully interweaves the personal and the political' - Guardian

'wit, punch and accessibility... this is theatre that mixes the personal with the political to fabulous effect. ... The scope is Shakespearean, yet Munro applies a contemporary sensibility to her medieval characters, who talk and swear in modern tongue' - The Times

'Rona Munro's three plays can stand confidently alone but, taken together, have a scale and reach that is thrilling and satisfying in equal measures' - Independent
Available since: 08/21/2014.
Print length: 320 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Magicians of Scotland - cover

    The Magicians of Scotland

    Ron Butlin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “A lively collection of poems that will entertain, move and frequently amuse.” —Alexander McCall Smith The author of The Magicians of Edinburgh returns with a new volume that celebrates and interrogates Scotland and its people at a crucial turning point in their history. Themes explored include the country’s past, present, and future, its landscape and its people, its myths and its politics—from Bannockburn, Flodden to Faslane, the Loch Ness Monster, wind farms, Hutton to Higgs, Bonnie Prince Charlie to Donald Trump. Accessible, serious yet entertaining, it reminds us that “Butlin is the best, the most productive Scottish poet of his generation” (Douglas Dunn).
    Show book
  • Mouth to Mouth (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    Mouth to Mouth (NHB Modern Plays)

    Kevin Elyot

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A brilliantly acerbic tragi-comedy from the author of My Night With Reg.
    At a homecoming party for Dennis and Laura's teenage son, the reappearance of an old family friend throws up secrets from the past and paves the way for fresh disaster.
    Kevin Elyot pins down the pretension and self-centredness of his characters with unerring and hilarious accuracy.
    'Marvellous... subtle and haunting' - Daily Telegraph
    'A portrayal of loss and pain whose power and subtlety will haunt you long after you leave' - Sunday Times
    Show book
  • Songs of Innocence and of Experience - cover

    Songs of Innocence and of...

    William Blake

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Songs of Innocence and of Experience is a collection of 45 poems by English poet William Blake.  Songs of Innocence is the first part of the collection and appeared in 1789 with engraved illustrations by Blake. The second part, Songs of Experience, also illustrated, was added in 1794 when Blake published the whole under the full title of Songs of Innocence and Experience Showing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul. The categories of innocence and experience are states of mind and ways of seeing that roughly correspond to the classical model of “paradise” and “fall”, as in Milton’s Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained.  Blake helped formulate the then contemporary Romantic notion of childhood as a state of innocence, without fear, inhibition, or corruption; and adulthood as a contrary and fallen state of original sin prey to oppression, corruption, and power. The opposition is reinforced by poems with like titles and contrasting themes in each part. The poems are short, simple, and acutely sensitive to both joys of life and the harsh realities of class and poverty in the emerging Industrial Revolution.
    Show book
  • Rumi's Little Book of the Heart - cover

    Rumi's Little Book of the Heart

    Maryam Mafi, Azima Melita Kolin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In this slender volume, Rumi explores the joy of friendship and the agony of loss. These poetic meditations on the most profound of human relationships are like crystals: they sparkle with the many hues of the rainbow and contain worlds within, capturing us with their mystery.Here are poems that cause us to reflect on our own relationships, to experience again the intensity of friendship, the ache of loss, and the profundity of immersion.This is a book for poetry lovers, Rumi fans, and all gift-giving occasions; a book to treasure and to share.Previously published in hardcover as Whispers of the Beloved.Imitating others,I failed to find myselfI looked inside and discoveredI only knew my name.When I stepped outsideI found my real Self.Replaces ISBN 9781571746825.
    Show book
  • The Poetry of Christina Georgina Rossetti - Pre-Raphaelite poet that came from huge literary and artistic roots - cover

    The Poetry of Christina Georgina...

    Christina Georgina Rossetti

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Christina Georgina Rossetti – An Introduction. Christina was born in London in 1830 one of four children who were all to become artists and writers.  Educated at home, her life was filled with the Italian influences of her Father and the wide ranging interests of her mother.  She began to write at age 12 as her Fathers health broke and the family’s descended to near poverty.  She first published aged 18 and over the following decade her writing was to flourish and in 1860 her most famous work Goblin Market was released and her reputation was set.  A sufferer from Graves disease from the 1870’s she also developed breast cancer which subsequently recurred and was to cause her death in 1894.  She is buried in Highgate Cemetery.  
     
    01 - Christina Georgina Rossetti - An Introduction 
    02 - A Birthday 
    03 - A Pause Of Thought 
    04 - A Study, A Soul 
    05 - Sonnets Are Full Of Love 
    06 - Dreamland 
    07 - Echo 
    08 - By The Sea 
    09 - Ferry Me Across The Water 
    10 - Frog & Toad 
    11 - If A Mouse Could Fly 
    12 - The City Mouse And The Country Mouse 
    13 - Lambs At Play 
    14 - A Spring Carol 
    15 - In The Willow Shade 
    16 - Summer 
    17 - Summer Is Ended 
    18 - If All Were Rain And Never Sun 
    19 - An October Garden 
    20 - Christmas Eve 
    21 - Good Friday 
    22 - A Years Windfalls 
    23 - How Many Seconds In A Minute 
    24 - Who Has Seen The World 
    25 - Wife To Husband 
    26 - Bitter For Sweet 
    27 - If Stars Dropped Out Of Heaven 
    28 - An Emerald Is As Green As Grass 
    29 - Is The Moon Tired 
    30 - Goblin Market 
    31 - In The Bleak Midwinter 
    32 - Winter - My Secret 
    33 - January Cold Desolate 
    34 - After This The Judgement 
    35 - After Death 
    36 - Sappho 
    37 - Goodbye In Fear Goodbye In Sorrow 
    38 - Dead Before Death 
    39 - Life And Death 
    40 - Remember 
    41 - Requiem
    Show book
  • The Bush Debate - cover

    The Bush Debate

    Edward Dyson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In 1892, two of Australia's best poets came up with a scheme to make some money. They arranged to have an argument in the Weekly Bulletin, and since they were being paid by the word, this let them fire back and forth, being sent beer money with each salvo. A couple of other poets also joined in, and their work is seminal to the development of the Bush ethos in Australia.The first eight files are the original form of the poems, and the second eight are later republications by the authors, in their own collections.  (Summary by Timothy Ferguson)
    Show book