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Book reviews for "Loftis,_John_Clyde,_Jr." sorted by average review score:
The School for Scandal (Crofts Classics)
Published in Paperback by Harlan Davidson (1986)
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Good satire of gabby society
Delightfully Scandalous
This book made it fun and delightful to follow how rumors and scandals are started. Anyone who wants a ligth hearted read in the style of a Shakespearean comedy, "School for Scandal" by Richard Sheridan is for you. It has the most entertaining characters, who anyone could recognize as being people they know and are friends with, and it pokes fun at soap-opera-like dramas that have forbidden loves and misleading coincidences. The situations that arise seem so unthinkable and impossible, and then you realize that you or someone you know has been there right down to the last detail. "School for Scandal" is a entertaining read for anyone who has ever passed on a rumor.
Comedy of Manners
The aptly named Sir Oliver Surface would like to know which of his nephews is the more worthy, and, well, nothing is ever simple. This comedy of manners is one of the best ever written, and it rings true 225 years after its first performance thanks to its snide comments on English aristocrats and one-liners such as "I'm called away by particular business. But I leave my character behind me."
The Dover Thrift edition has no introduction or analysis. Intoduction and analysis are of course not necessary, but in some situations they are nice things to have.
An Account of the English Dramatic Poets (Augustan Reprint Society Special Publication ; No. 5)
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (1995)
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Comedy and Society from Congreve to Fielding
Published in Hardcover by AMS Press (1979)
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Memoirs of Anne, Lady Halkett, and Ann, Lady Fanshawe
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (1992)
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Renaissance Drama in England and Spain: Topical Allusion and History Plays
Published in Hardcover by Princeton Univ Pr (1987)
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Sheridan and the drama of Georgian England
Published in Unknown Binding by Blackwell ()
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The Spanish Plays of Neoclassical England,
Published in Textbook Binding by Yale Univ Pr (1973)
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Steele at Drury Lane,
Published in Textbook Binding by Greenwood Publishing Group (1973)
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The school's "principals" are Lady Sneerwell and a man named Snake, who like to collect gossip about their neighbors and others in London society; one of their cohorts is the brilliantly ironic character Mrs. Candour, who openly reprehends idle gossip but blithely participates in it anyway. One of their favorite subjects of gossip is the Surface brothers, Joseph and Charles. The popular perception is that Joseph is responsible and respectable, while Charles is a wastrel and a miscreant.
The Surface brothers' uncle, Sir Oliver Surface, returns to London after spending many years in India, hears the rumors about his nephews, and decides to verify them for the purpose of choosing an heir between the two. Since he has been gone so long that his nephews would not recognize him, he visits them incognito. Posing as a moneylender to Charles, and as a poor relative to Joseph, he discovers that his nephews are not quite of the natures he has been led to believe.
Sheridan employs some typical comedic devices like love triangles and hiding characters, but for the most part this is an inventive play that picks its targets well and hits the bullseye every time. Considering it was written at such a turbulent time in England's history, it's interesting that social satire still managed to break through greater national concerns and be successful and appreciated.