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Waiting for Godot
Waiting for Godot

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Author: Samuel Beckett
Publisher: Faber and Faber
Category: Book

List Price: £9.99
Buy Used: £2.85
You Save: £7.14 (71%)



New (25) from £3.10

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 19 reviews
Sales Rank: 6180

Media: Paperback
Pages: 96
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 0.4

ISBN: 0571229115
EAN: 9780571229116
ASIN: 0571229115

Publication Date: January 5, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: A brand new copy. But minor marks to cover while in transit, otherwise book is like new. Mailed the same working day.

Also Available In:

  • Spiral-bound - Waiting for Godot (Modern world literature series)
  • Paperback - Waiting for Godot
  • Hardcover - Waiting for Godot (His Collected Works)
  • Paperback - Waiting for Godot
  • Hardcover - Waiting for Godot
  • Paperback - Waiting for Godot: A tragicomedy in two acts
  • Hardcover - Waiting for Godot: En Attendant Godot
  • Paperback - Waiting for Godot (Acting Edition)
  • Turtleback - Waiting for Godot
  • Hardcover - "Waiting for Godot" - Samuel Beckett (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations) (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations (Hardcover))
  • Hardcover - Waiting for Godot: With a Revised Text: 1 (Theatrical Notebooks of Samuel Beckett)
  • Paperback - Waiting for Godot
  • School & Library Binding - Waiting for Godot
  • Unknown Binding - Waiting for Godot
  • Paperback - "Waiting for Godot" (MaxNotes)
  • Hardcover - Samuel Beckett's "Waiting for Godot" (Modern Critical Interpretations)
  • VHS Tape - Waiting for Godot (Samuel Beckett : the Video Series)
  • Paperback - Waiting for Godot.
  • Audio CD - Waiting for Godot
  • Unknown Binding - Waiting for Godot
  • Unknown Binding - Waiting for Godot
  • Paperback - WAITING FOR GODOT: A TRAGICOMEDY IN TWO ACTS
  • Board book - Waiting for Godot

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Customer Reviews:   Read 14 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Seek and ye shall find   August 29, 2008
When this play was first performed in London, Harold Hobson, drama critic of The Sunday Times said it was 'a conversational necessity'.
Being a mere child at the time I though this meant it was good. I sat through it with my girl-friend, and it seemed to me to be complete gibberish. What does it mean? she asked. I'll tell you at the end of the performance, I replied, hoping for a denoument. I couldn't tell her, because to me it was meaningless. How many critics here tell you what it means?

Last year, aged 70 and professor of literature, I saw it again in a lauded production at the Barbican. I sat through the first half becoming more and more angry. Becket, I thought, is making fools of us all. At the Interval I walked out, and didn't come back. The play's message is simple: Most of us believe in God. We wait to eventually meet him. But there is no God. And we are wasting our time. Shakespeare said it so much more briefly and poetically in Macbeth. Life 'is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.' Waiting for Godot signifies nothing. If you search for meaning I'm sure you'll find it. If you take the play at its face value, it's nonsense. Twice.



5 out of 5 stars Stark and bewildering   February 13, 2008
I read this play more than ten years ago for a course in contemporary drama. At first I was completely lost, considered the dialogue pointless, and found it incredibly boring. However, following a visit to The Gate Theatre in Dublin, my opinion of the play changed entirely - the dialogue's pointlessness made sense finally, the existentialism of the play became comprehensible, not to mention the subtle dark humour. I started to see the brilliance of the play - if we are bored, lost, bewildered, uncertain, unhappy, and at the same time, find humour in this, then the play has achieved its purpose (as I see it). In other words, it reflects the condition of human life as Beckett chose to describe it, and not only this, it succeeds in drawing us deeply into his description and invites us, as reluctant as we may be, to live it through our reading. A brilliant, if rather discomforting reflection on the pain, whispers of humour and ultimate meaninglessness of human life.


1 out of 5 stars The Emperor's not wearing any clothes...   September 16, 2007
 0 out of 10 found this review helpful

Like the godawful works of Pinter that followed, Beckett's "Waiting For Godot" is a masterwork in the field of pretentious garbage. This play is neither funny nor entertaining; the ludicrous dialogue frustrates, the characters try their hardest to prove themselves wholly unreal, and, as that famous review quoted from the lines of the play itself, "nothing happens."
Yet today "Godot" is hailed as a masterpiece of modern drama owing to its apparently being a well of deep hidden meaning and symbolism. When one looks at a blank wall for long enough blotches and other irregularities gradually become noticeable to the eye; hell, some might even claim to see a face in said blotches. But let's be honest, it's just a blank wall. Similarly, "Godot" is a wholly unsatisfying waste of an hour and a half, saved by a horrifyingly large number of people's determination to see clothes on the Emperor when really there are none.



5 out of 5 stars It will definitely come tomorrow   November 11, 2006
 4 out of 12 found this review helpful

I have always been tempted to write the sequel, "The arrival of Godot"
However like Fermat's last theorem I fear the world is unlikely ever to see this masterpiece. Godot is a very naughty boy who refuses to come in on time. And at his age (at least 53) he should know better.

Get ready for the telling off of all time when he does turn up!

This is a great play, mostly for what it does not say, rather than what it does.



4 out of 5 stars Beckett exposes an aspect of human nature in a ruthless and harrowing way   November 1, 2006
 8 out of 19 found this review helpful

It is perfectly true to say there are very few characters in this play. Vladimir and Estragon, two tramps, are the main characters of the play. The only other characters are Pozzo, Lucky and a boy. There are no changes of scenery or setting. Vladimir and Estragon are waiting for Godot. The audience never learns who Godot is or his significance for Vladimir and Estragon. The play in two acts is simply about the tramps waiting for Godot.

You may be thinking, this sounds exactly like a waste of paper and ink. In my opinion, Waiting for Godot is a great play, though not exactly an example of what I usually read.

Consider this: utter boredom. Isn't life in itself boring? After a certain age as we progress into adulthood, we become bored with life. Quoting Solomon, 'there is nothing new under the sun' (Ecc 1:9). Too many of us fall into a routine - life becomes a tiresome routine. Many of us, right up to when we're forty years old, are waiting for our lives to begin. If we take a moment to step back and view how we've conformed to our repetitive patterns of life, it's as frightening as two tramps having nothing to do, nothing to talk about, simply waiting.

How many of us find it difficult to find topics to talk about with acquaintances? We've all subconsciously wondered what it would be like to have absolutely nothing to talk about or do, desperately looking for something to pass the time, but Beckett dares to expose this in a stark and unapologetic way.

I found this play has a lot of relevance to modern society. So, fantastic play but prepare to be depressed by truths of life. All in all, a great book for the open-minded.

I have found that only way to get true meaning and hope in life is through Jesus.




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