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A stunning first play about an academic attempting to come to terms with cancer.
Winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
Now an Emmy-award winning feature film starring Emma Thompson
Vivian Bearing, Ph.D., a renowned specialist in the brilliantly difficult Holy Sonnets of John Donne, has been diagnosed with stage four metatastic ovarian cancer. Her approach to her illness is not unlike her approach to Donne: aggressively probing and intensely rational. But during the course of her illness � and her stint as a prize patient in an experimental chemotherapy programme � she comes to reassess her life and her work with profundity and an unbearably moving wry humour.
'An original and urgent work of art. Among the finest plays of the decade' - Wall Street Journal
'A dazzling and humane play you will remember until your dying day' - New York Magazine
'A brutally human and beautifully layered new play. You will feel both enlightened and, in a strange way, enormously comforted' - New York Times
99 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1995
“It has always been my custom to treat words with respect. I can recall the time--the very hour of the very day--when I knew words would be my life's work.”
I thought being extremely smart would take care of it. But I see that I have been found out.
“How are you feeling today?”
I am waiting for the moment when someone asks me this question and I am dead.
I’m a little sorry I’ll miss that.
Now is a time for simplicity. Now is a time for, dare I say it, kindness.
The time for extreme measures has come. I am in terrible pain. Susie says that I need to begin aggressive pain management if I am going to stand it.
“It”: such a little word. In this case, I think “it” signifies “being alive.”