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Heartbreak House

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Heartbreak House

Described by his contemporaries as a "master of impeccable prose," "the great exploder of complacency," and a "showman of ideas," George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) is today regarded as the most important British comic dramatist since Cosgreve. Heartbreak House, however, is one of Shaw's more somber plays. An allegory that examines apathy, confusion, and lack of purpose as causes of major world problems, the drama features larger-than-life characters who represent evils of the modern world. Initially pessimistic, the play nevertheless ends on an optimistic note.
Written in 1913 and first produced in 1923, Heartbreak House, with its portrayal of a bored and frustrated upper-middle class, is a prime example of Shaw's unconventional and provocative literary style.


Reprint of a standard edition.
black comedy; british theater; british plays; twentieth century theater; somber play; comic dramatist; allegorical play; major world problems; upper middle class; boredom and frustration; unconventional literary style; provocative; larger than life characters; evils of the modern world; optimistic play; supernatural explosion; inability to cope; womens liberation; George Bernartd Shaw; Heartbreak House; Plays by George Bernard Shaw; English Plays; 20th Century Plays
$2.10

Original: $6.00

-65%
Heartbreak House—

$6.00

$2.10

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Described by his contemporaries as a "master of impeccable prose," "the great exploder of complacency," and a "showman of ideas," George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) is today regarded as the most important British comic dramatist since Cosgreve. Heartbreak House, however, is one of Shaw's more somber plays. An allegory that examines apathy, confusion, and lack of purpose as causes of major world problems, the drama features larger-than-life characters who represent evils of the modern world. Initially pessimistic, the play nevertheless ends on an optimistic note.
Written in 1913 and first produced in 1923, Heartbreak House, with its portrayal of a bored and frustrated upper-middle class, is a prime example of Shaw's unconventional and provocative literary style.


Reprint of a standard edition.
black comedy; british theater; british plays; twentieth century theater; somber play; comic dramatist; allegorical play; major world problems; upper middle class; boredom and frustration; unconventional literary style; provocative; larger than life characters; evils of the modern world; optimistic play; supernatural explosion; inability to cope; womens liberation; George Bernartd Shaw; Heartbreak House; Plays by George Bernard Shaw; English Plays; 20th Century Plays