
Hapgood
Tom Stoppard
(Author)Description
Product Details
Publisher | Grove Press |
Publish Date | May 08, 2018 |
Pages | 196 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780802128348 |
Dimensions | 8.2 X 5.4 X 0.5 inches | 0.3 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Intricate, absorbing . . . Fascinating . . . As with the best of le Carré, Hapgood delivers a satisfying two-fer. You can revel in the trappings, tradecraft, turnabouts, and general hugger-mugger of the traditional spy thriller . . . But you also get to immerse yourself in the big-picture Stoppardian play of ideas."--Boston Globe
"Merciful, witty, glancingly cerebral espionage drama . . . [Stoppard] has the ability to demonstrate intelligence as well as to display it. Hapgood fascinates and draws you in without ever turning you off . . . The breathless story engages the mind and emotions . . . The characters are written and performed with great feeling and common sense."--New York Times
"Complex, erudite--the product of what has to be the most capacious and intricate mind devoted to the dramatist's craft these days."--Los Angeles Times
"[Stoppard] has been called cerebral, but his mind is a cogitating heart; it lusts for ideas . . . Written during the endgame of the cold war, the play is a theatrical cyclotron into which Stoppard tosses his colliding human atoms . . . On the surface the play is a le Carré-like thriller . . . [Stoppard is] a marvelous entertainer . . . [A] metaphysical fun house."--Newsweek
"Few playwrights entertain as many ideas and make so many ideas entertaining as Tom Stoppard . . . [Hapgood] is hugely entertaining and often quite moving."--Variety
"Vastly entertaining."--Jewish Chronicle
"Stoppard's most cunning play yet."--Guardian
"Best to submit to the unique Stoppardian experience, be carried long by this clever and theatrically playful spymaster--and savor the wit and wordplay . . . and the fact that, in the end, everything makes perfect emotional sense."--Daily Mail
"A plot of fiendish ingenuity."--Independent
"[C]onsciously nostalgic for an era in British intelligence in which spymasters had bakelite telephones on their desk, spoke to each other by radio and in which the Cold War offered up a relatively simple paradigm of them and us . . . a frequently gripping piece about the multifaceted interplay between perception and deception that also slips in a sly tug on the emotions just when you least expect it."--Telegraph (UK)
"The play is itself a double agent. . . completely joyous . . . unparalleled verbal dexterity . . . a rollicking spy story to boot."--TimeOut (UK)
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