Someone, somewhere, had this (or something like it) to say about Beethoven: "The Fifth Symphony was the work of a genius. 'Wellington's Victory' was the work of a man who had to pay the rent." A similar feeling will result from reading through this volume of what's described on the back cover as "fantastic, lesser-known one-acts," as well as "most potent, witty and wild late plays." Well, no. The ten plays included here, dating from the last decade of his life, do nothing to increase the illumination that is the bright, shining light of Tennessee Williams (1911–83). They read like cheap Edward Albee or Samuel Beckett, or worse. The short pieces might do as student acting exercises (the longest of them would take under 20 minutes to perform; the casts allow for much doubling) or serve as additional texts in graduate-level American lit courses.
VERDICT Only for completists; not an essential purchase.
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