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
Fury - cover

Fury

Phoebe Eclair-Powell

Publisher: Nick Hern Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

A chilling and powerful modern Medea about motherhood and class, taking an unapologetic look at the single young mum, the one already judged before she's even opened her mouth.
This is Sam. Young, impulsive, single mum. Londoner born and bred and never ever left. Sam makes her mistakes, but who can blame her?
Tom rents the flat above, the one Sam cleans. If they can come to 'an arrangement' he won't call the Social on her. You might think Tom is a monster. You might think Sam's kids would be better off without her. Someone needs to make a decision.
Winner of the Soho Theatre Young Writer's Award, Phoebe Eclair-Powell's play Fury premiered at Soho Theatre, London, in July 2016.
Available since: 07/07/2016.
Print length: 64 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Epic Poems - cover

    The Epic Poems

    William Shakespeare

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Before the Stage, There Was the Page: Discover Shakespeare the Poet.
    
    While the world knows William Shakespeare for his legendary plays, it was his sweeping narrative poems that first established him as a literary titan in the eyes of the Elizabethan elite. This collection brings together his longer, epic-style works—masterpieces of desire, betrayal, and political ruin that showcase a level of linguistic ornament and psychological intensity rarely seen on the stage.
    
    This collection explores the pillars of Shakespeare's poetic genius:
    
    The Master of Classical Adaptation: Witness the Bard reimagining the myths of ancient Rome and Greece, breathing fresh, visceral life into tales of tragic desire and legendary honor.
    
    The Psychology of the Verse: Experience the internal monologues of characters caught in moments of extreme crisis, rendered with the same complexity found in his greatest dramatic soliloquies.
    
    Formal Perfection: Explore his command of demanding poetic structures, from the flowing "Sesta Rima" to the stately "Rhyme Royal," demonstrating a technical virtuosity that defined the English Renaissance.
    
    Themes of Power and Virtue: Delve into narratives that examine the corruption of authority and the resilience of the human spirit, serving as a poetic mirror to the political tensions of his time.
    
    Shakespeare's epic poems offer a richer, more descriptive immersion into his world than his scripts alone. They are essential for anyone seeking the full breadth of his literary legacy and linguistic beauty.
    
    Experience the Bard's most intimate and ornate creations. Buy "The Epic Poems of William Shakespeare" today and complete your library of the world's greatest writer.
    Show book
  • Taking Root in the Heart - A Collection of Thirty-Four Poets from "The Christian Century" - cover

    Taking Root in the Heart - A...

    Jill Peláez Baumgaertner

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A new collection from the best and most prolific poets published in the Christian Century over the past twenty-five years. 
    
    The 34 poets whose work appears defy the narcissistic tendencies of so much contemporary poetry. They do not necessarily express a particular orthodoxy, but they do connect with something larger than the self. Theirs is poetry that attempts to revitalize language, especially theological language. It is poetry that attempts to upset the usual modes of expression and offers up new angles of vision, especially in regard to biblical stories. For most of the poets—though not all by any means—Jesus is the Word made flesh, and the Incarnation is the paradigm as poets attempt to enflesh the abstract, make the spirit tangible, and put into words the unsayable. Poets have a way of taking on what utterly cannot be done. And those are the poems that should appear in a journal of religious news and reflection.
    The poetic approaches and styles of the work of these poets are immensely varied, from the masterful narratives of Sydney Lea to the finely wrought lyrics of Charles Hughes to the always edgy and surprising poems of Bill Stadick to the most imagistic and prolific work of Luci Shaw to the provocative poems of Christian Wiman. Then there are the superb sonnets of Gracia Grindal and Angela Alaimo O'Donnell and the compelling explorations of the deep spirituality of the everyday that comprise Tania Runyan's vision.
    The poems in the journal often explore biblical themes, doctrinal issues, or theological conundrums. But many of the poems that appear in the Christian Century present human experience or encounters with the natural world that do not seem on the surface "religious" but reveal a deep humanity at the core. What defines all of these poems is a commitment to communicating with readers seeking truth, beauty, and authenticity.
    Watch the Book Trailer HERE!
    Show book
  • Poets on Poets - Famous poets write poems about other famous poets About as classy and creative a form of celebrity gossip tribute to exist - cover

    Poets on Poets - Famous poets...

    Thomas Hood, Alice Meynell,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Writing poetry always seems to be something we learn at school, usually beginning with a couplet of child-like rhyme that brings gales of laughter.  Later it may be agonising over a verse or two attempting to rhapsodise on love and then the years roll on with only an occasional desire to return.   
     
    In this volume we put together wordsmiths of the highest caliber as they write on Poets themselves.  Many of the poems provide valuable insights on how other poets are seen by their peers.  Some are deeply personal others are abstract.  Whether they speak at the celebration of a birth or the knowing tragedy of entering a slaughterous battle these poets take us into new uncharted territories revealing their inner selves in raw and tender ways. 
     
    Yeats, Flecker, Benet, Yeats, Dickinson, Coleridge, Millay, Levy, Gurney are but a few of their number who speak with the clarity, the eloquence and the truth that only a poet can know….but all can share. 
     
    01 - Poets on Poets - An Introduction 
    02 - A Caution to Poets by Matthew Arnold 
    03 - To a Poet by Emily Hickey 
    04 - To a Poet by Alice Meynell 
    05 - To a Poet by Claude McKay 
    06 - To Poets by Charles Sorley 
    07 - The Poet by Aleksandr Pushkin 
    08 - The Poet by Radclyffe Hall 
    09 - The Poet by Paul Laurence Dunbar 
    10 - The Poet to Nature by Alice Meynell 
    11 - Sonnet VII - Sweet Poet of the Woods by Charlotte Smith 
    12 - To John Keats, Poet, At Spring Time by Countee Cullen 
    13 - False Poets and True (To Wordsworth) by Thomas Hood 
    14 - On Dryden by Christopher Caudwell 
    15 - On Poet-Ape by Ben Jonson 
    16 - On the Morals of Poets by Richard Le Gallienne 
    17 - The Poets by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 
    18 - The Toast by Ernest Rhys 
    19 - A Minor Poet by Stephen Vincent Benet 
    20 - To Alex Smith, the Glasgow Poet by George Meredith 
    21 - The Peasant Poet by John Clare 
    22 - London Poets by Amy Levy 
    23 - Negro Poets by Charles Bertram Johnson 
    24 - A Poet's Hope by Ambrose Bierce 
    25 - The Poet's Portion by Thomas Hood 
    26 - Poets by Khalil Gibran 
    27 - The Poet's Apology by Aristophanes 
    28 - A Tale of the Miser and His Poet by Anne Kingsmill Finch 
    29 - The Poet, the Oyster and Sensitive Plant by William Cowper 
    30 - The Bad Season Makes the Poet Sad by Robert Herrick 
    31 - Besides The Autumn Poets Sing by Emily Dickinson 
    32 - A Poet of One Mood by Alice Meynell 
    33 - Fancy in Nubibus or The Poet in the Clouds  by Samuel Taylor Coleridge 
    34 - The Poet Pleads with the Elemental Powers by W B Yeats 
    35 - Singers To Come by Alice Meynell 
    36 - To a Poet a Thousand Years Hence by James Elroy Flecker 
    37 - The Young Poet by James Elroy Flecker 
    38 - Portrait of the Author by William Carlos Williams 
    39 - The Modern Poet - A Song of Derivations by Alice Meynell 
    40 - The Poet to His Childhood by Alice Meynell 
    37 - A Poet's Father by Ambrose Bierce 
    42 - A Poet's Welcome To His Love Begotten Daughter by Robert Burns 
    43 - A Poet to His Baby Son by James Weldon Johnson 
    44 - Mother and Poet by Elizabeth Barrett Browning 
    45 - The Martyr Poets - Did Not Tell by Emily Dickinson 
    46 - Trench Poets by Edgell Rickword 
    47 - England's Poet by Laurence Binyon 
    48 - A Poet Unknown by Ernest Rhys 
    49 - To the Poet Before Battle by Ivor Gurney 
    50 - The Poets Are Waiting by Harold Munro 
    51 - Lament for the Poets, 1916 by Francis Ledwidge 
    52 - The Poet's Knowledge by Raymond Chandler 
    53 - These Things That Poets Said by Edward Thomas 
    54 - This Was A Poet - It Is That by Emily Dickinson 
    55 - The Old Poet by Amy Levy 
    56 - The Old Poet by James Elroy Flecker 
    57 - The
    Show book
  • The Poetry of Ben Jonson - Poems from the popular playwright many deem second only to Shakespeare in English literature - cover

    The Poetry of Ben Jonson - Poems...

    Ben Jonson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Benjamin "Ben" Jonson was born in June, 1572. A contemporary of William Shakespeare, he is best known for his satirical plays; Volpone, The Alchemist, and Bartholomew Fair, and his equally accomplished lyric poems.  
    A man of vast reading and a seemingly insatiable appetite for controversy, including time in jail and a penchant for switching faiths, Jonson had an unparalleled breadth of influence on Jacobean and Caroline playwrights and poets. 
    In 1616 Jonson was appointed by King James I to receive a yearly pension of £60 to become what is now recognised as the post of the first official Poet Laureate.    
    He died on the 6th of August, 1637 at Westminster and is buried in the north aisle of the nave at Westminster Abbey. 
    A master of both playwriting and poetry his reputation continues to endure and reach a new audience with each succeeding generation. 
     This volume comes to you from Portable Poetry, a specialized imprint from Deadtree Publishing.  Our range is large and growing and covers single poets, themes, and many compilations.
    Show book
  • Hafiz's Little Book of Life - cover

    Hafiz's Little Book of Life

    Hafiz Hafiz

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Silver Winner, Focused Topic-Translation, Nautilus Book Awards “Delicate and tough, a crafted danger, full of wit as well as abandon, Hafiz’s lyric is one of the rare mysteries of world literature.” —Coleman Barks, author and translator of The Essential Rumi   I have this gem and it’s looking for a beholder   Hafiz of Shiraz (also known as Hafez) remains the most beloved name in all of Persian literature. Indeed, his mystic, lyric poetry is cherished as one of the great achievements of world literature, on a par with Dante, Goethe, and Shakespeare.  Hafiz’s Little Book of Life is a lush collection of more than 250 selections from his lifework. Also included is a vivid portrait of his life and times, translators’ notes, an extensive glossary, a bibliography, and an appendix on Hafiz as an oracle. Here are classic soaring flights of fancy and solid life lessons—made new by two award-winning translators.   This is the perfect introduction to Hafiz for all lovers of poetry and seekers of love, spirituality, and wisdom. Let the unforgettable words of Hafiz shine through you with their love, profundity, wit, and celebration of life.   “This is translation as a real ‘carrying-across,’ as art, not artifact . . . this one drops the reader/listener directly into their own soul-struggle. Immerse yourself and be transformed!” —Neil Douglas-Klotz, author of The Sufi Book of Life and A Little Book of Sufi Stories   “From the first page, you are invited to settle into a sublime sanctuary and partake in enchantment until you feel the Beloved inside your beating heart and running through your veins.” —Ari Honarvar, author of A Girl Called Rumi
    Show book
  • Lent - cover

    Lent

    Kate Cayley

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Longlisted for the 2024 Fred Cogswell Award For Excellence In Poetry
    
    Finalist for the 2023 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards
    
    In these peculiar times, we are thrust back into ourselves in a kind of suspension: one in which only private life exists yet threatens to become trivial through a sense of mutual, overarching dread.
    Lent from award-winning writer Kate Cayley is built from this tension, exploring domestic and artistic life amidst the environmental crisis and the surprising ways that every philosophical quandary—large and small—converges in the home, in small objects, conversations, and moments. The grotesque and the tedious, the baroque and the banal, intertwine in the first three sections. Meticulous depictions of spectacle run into the repetition of daily domestic life: trying to explain time to children, day trips to the planetarium, and the warnings of strangers; these are interspersed with depictions such as Mary Shelley recalling the monster, the inner life of a seventeenth century portrait sitter, and Ted Hughes's second wife telling her story to the dead Sylvia Plath. The title section explores religious faith; how belief is itself a repetition, a slow accumulation over time, just like love or forgiveness.
    Lent is an exquisite work of our era, asking us to contemplate what it means to live in a broken world—and why we still find it beautiful.
    Show book