Death of a Salesman: Certain Private Conversations in Two Acts and a Requiem (Penguin Modern Classics) by Arthur Miller
English | May 3, 2013 | ASIN: B00AQ9NIPE | 87 pages | AZW3 | 1.11 MB
English | May 3, 2013 | ASIN: B00AQ9NIPE | 87 pages | AZW3 | 1.11 MB
In the spring of 1948 Arthur Miller retreated to a log cabin in Connecticut with the first two lines of a new play already fixed in his mind. He emerged six weeks later with the final script of Death of a Salesman - a painful examination of American life and consumerism. Opening on Broadway the following year, Miller's extraordinary masterpiece changed the course of modern theatre. In creating Willy Loman, his destructively insecure anti-hero, Miller himself defined his aim as being 'to set forth what happens when a man does not have a grip on the forces of life.'