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Reviews for The Campden Wonder

 The Campden Wonder magazine reviews

The average rating for The Campden Wonder based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2007-05-12 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 5 stars Michele Braun
I not only really like Shakespeare's Coriolanus: I also like the man Coriolanus as he is revealed in the play. Sure, he may be a hothead, an arrogant bully, an immature mama's boy with a proto-fascist personality, but he is also a man of extraordinary physical courage and sincere personal modesty who would like nothing better than to do his warrior's duty and be left alone. Unfortunately, though, his mother--whose values are also those of the Roman republic--sees her son's patrician duty as including a consulship, and the populist politicking it requires--which a proud and simple man like Coriolanus can only experience as self-abasement--inevitably leads to his shame and eventually to his destruction. He cannot be true both to his mother and his republic and to himself--and that is his tragedy. The verse of this play is often harsh and crabbed, but it is a monumental crabbedness, an imposing harshness--very much like the personality of its hero.
Review # 2 was written on 2019-07-06 00:00:00
2005was given a rating of 5 stars Yaroslav Alexanderovich Kazmin
Coriolanus solidified my Shakespeare obsession. I'd become familiar with the canon--Hamlet, Macbeth, Julius Caesar, The Tempest, R&J, etc--but then I read Coriolanus and couldn't believe it. There was this play, rarely talked about, that's as brilliant--if not more brilliant--than all the others so often listed as required reading. It was like discovering life on Mars. From the first line, I devoured the pages faster than I would a John Grisham novel. Shakespeare's language, sometimes daunting, didn't stand in my way at all, though I did use the aid of footnotes, audio performance, and the occasional sparknotes summary for clarification. As always, Shakespeare develops characters so richly they appear to be on stage even when they're just on page. And the plot, too, contains shocking relevance to our modern society. Since we borrowed many ideas from their government, I suppose it's not surprising that the Roman plays hit so close to home. Still, it's uncanny. The whole time I kept thinking about how similar the plot was to the Occupy Wallstreet movement and, of course, the 2012 election for president. Now, with all the drama and turmoil in today's politics, it's even more current. Everything about the story is timeless and the execution is truly the experience of a lifetime. Overall, I do see why Coriolanus isn't a forced-upon text in high school. Unlike the linear progression of Macbeth and Hamlet, there's a more scattered approach to character study and movement of plot. That said, as a Shakespeare nerd, I am shocked that I don't hear more about this play among the scholarly crowd. The language is among Shakespeare's best (I added a good 10 or so quotes to my list of favorites during my read) and the characters endlessly intriguing (especially the mother). Although Ralph Fiennes' wonderful movie gave some much-deserved attention, there still needs to be a day where everyone is as familiar with this play as they are with Shakespeare's other masterworks.


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