Author:Jean-Baptiste Moliere,David Coward,David Coward,David Wood

Molière combined all the traditional elements of comedy - wit, slapstick, spectacle and satire - to create richly sophisticated and enduringly popular dramas. The Miser is the story of Harpagon, a mean-spirited old man who becomes obsessed with making money out of the marriage of his children, while The Hypochondriac, another study in obsession, is a brilliant satire on the medical profession. The School for Wives, in which an ageing domestic tyrant is foiled in his plans to marry his young ward, provoked such an outcry that Molière followed it with The School for Wives Criticized - a witty retort to those who disapproved of the play's supposed immorality. And while Don Juan is the darkest and most tragic of all the plays in this collection, it still mocks the soullessness of the skinflint with scathing irony.
'Definitely an up-all-night-to-finish-it book. I loved it'
—— Cathy KellyLike Isabel Allende and Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Phillips writes of times so heady and chaotic and of characters so compelling that time moves as if guided by the moon and dreams
—— Los Angeles Times Book ReviewOne of the literary giants of our time
—— New York TimesThis is literary fiction at its very best - a gripping, character-driven novel that portrays the malaise of a whole society through the stories of two individuals
—— Sunday TribuneOne of the literary giants of our time
—— New York Times






