Furious that Prince Hippolytus will not worship her; Aphrodite; goddess of love; seeks revenge. Infecting Hippolytus stepmother; Phaedra; with an overpowering desire for him; Aphrodites retribution will sweep both prince and queen to a brutal end.A secret tormentStorms through herTosses her into that black harbourDeath.Timberlake Wertenbakers translation of Euripides tragedy Hippolytus premiered at Riverside Studios; London; in February; 2009 in a production by Temple Theatre.
#1984628 in eBooks 2015-01-05 2015-01-05File Name: B00S8NCKPO
Review
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Tony Fletcher also has a lot of interesting takes on songs and albums that are pretty objective; there isnt much literary interBy A CustomerThis book is full of just about everything you wanted to know about The Smiths; from beginning to end. While I mostly wanted to hear about how the songs were written and the inter-band relationships; I also learned a ton of information about the nuances of band-label relationships; the dynamics of 1980s music press and industry at large; and so on.Tony Fletcher also has a lot of interesting takes on songs and albums that are pretty objective; there isnt much literary interpretation of Morrisseys lyrics here; thank god. It makes me listen to The Smiths in a whole new way; and I gotta thank Fletcher for that. His perspective on Meat Is Murder is particularly enlightening; Fletcher admits that the album in part made him become a vegetarian.It should be noted that Fletcher got extensive interviews with Johnny Marr and Andy Rourke but not Mike Joyce and Morrissey; which is lacking at times. Fletcher tends to paint Morrissey in a particularly bad light; but its hard to tell if thats Fletchers bias or Morrissey just really is an a**hole (from all the quotes from other people in the book; it probably is the latter).Sometimes there was too much information; though. Its true that Tony Fletcher was incredibly involved in the music industry at the time - from interviewing members of The Smiths to putting out records in his own band; but that doesnt necessarily mean that I want to hear about Fletchers band or the fact that he was at this show or that show. Often there would be huge tangents about the music industry that had next to nothing to do with The Smiths. The sentences themselves would get so long with gigantic dependent clauses; parenthetical asides; and footnotes to the point of absurdity. There was even a parenthetical aside within a parenthetical aside that had its own footnote. The fact that the short Smiths quotes at the beginning of each chapter didnt necessarily encapsulate what Fletcher was going to talk about for that chapter showed that he lacked organization and and conciseness. The fact that Fletcher doesnt always use a semicolon and other grammatical tools correctly really irks me.Overall; I really dont like Fletchers writing style; and it made for a really slow read. But the information is too good to pass up; so I would say just plow through it and become a bigger Smiths fan in the process!2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. A brilliant; but obsessive; book about the SmithsBy Michael A. DuvernoisYou probably need to be a serious fan before you go in on 700 pages about the band. Though I am going to try to loan this book to a friend who knows nothing of the Smiths to see if the obsession in the book; in the writing; in the backgrounds; in the details; is at all infectious. The Smiths are one of the great bands of the 1980s; and perhaps of popular music in the second half of the 20th century. If theyre important; then the details are important as well; so you learn the backdrop; the pavement of Manchester; the UK music magazine scene; the post-punk era; and most of all the personalities of Marr and Morrissey.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Sensational SmithsBy Mrs Michelle ZebottI thought I knew a lot about one of my favorite bands; but I was wrong. This book is so in depth and so informative; Ive learned so much. Im already intending to purchase Tony Fletchers Remarks Remade; about REM. I highly recommend this book for any true fan of The Smiths.