Nobel Prize Writers

Friday 18 February 2011

1936 - Eugene O'Neill



Long Day’s Journey Into Night (1956)
Often blurbs are not very accurate but I would agree that this play is possibly ‘the finest and most powerful play to have come out of America’ and that O’Neil is ‘one of the twentieth century’s most significant writers’ whose ‘true value to the theatre is still being discovered’.  So powerfully & finely wrought are these characters whose drama not so much jumps but punches it’s way out of the book format.  Like George Bernard Shaw there are long descriptive passages of the scene but thankfully without any of the pretense of teaching lessons, developing theories (with demonstration) or any other baggage that weighs down and overshadows the soul.  Emotion reeks all over from every line of speech going from ‘(thickly humorous)’ to ‘(Then disgustedly)’ to ‘(Then appreciatively)’ within 38 words to create what is the metaphoric equivalent to a roller-coaster combined ghost-train.  It has intensity and tension on every page; introspective neurosis and expressive rage on every other.  I have 14 pages left to find out how it ends and the only reason I’m not reading it now is because I am utterly exhausted, mentally, emotionally, & almost physically, from reading the previous three acts; so although I do wish to wait I will not try to attempt finishing it off for the sake of my health.   

How I could cope watching Long Day’s Journey Into Night on the stage I do not know.      

Tuesday 8 February 2011

1953 - Winston Churchill




 Winston Churchill once wrote a novel entitled The Inside of the Cup.  It’s an odd book for him to write, set in America involving discussions of faith, odd that is until you realise that it was not Churchill the Prime Minister but Churchill the American novelist who wrote it.  For a while I wasn’t sure.  I knew he achieved the Prize & so why can’t it have been for novels as well as for the charted document of history/ autobiography?  I had no idea there was another famous, at least somewhat well known, Churchill living around at the same time.  

 There must be an idea for a Borges type short story involving a conversation between the two Winstons who talk about power and publishing before one kills the other.  

 What are the chances?