Friday, 16 August 2013

The Man of Destiny - George Bernard Shaw

The Man of Destiny - George Bernard Shaw

Author: George Bernard Shaw

This is Shaw's short play about Napoleon. He manages to bring his usual themes of class and money into it, but to tell you the truth, I read it a year and a half ago and barely remember it. I remember that I liked it OK at the time, but the plot, the other characters, all have faded. Thus I conclude, not one of Shaw's more memorable works.


About the author

George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was a worldrenowned Irish author. Born in Dublin, he moved to London when he turned twenty. Having rejected formal schooling, he educated himself by independent study in the reading room of the British Museum; he also began his career there by writing novels for which he could not find a publisher. His first success was as a music and literary critic, but he was drawn to drama and authored more than sixty plays during his career.

Typically his work is leavened by a delightful vein of comedy, but nearly all of it bears earnest messages Shaw hoped his audiences would embrace. He remains the only person to have been awarded both a Nobel Prize (1925) for his contribution to literature and an Oscar (1938) for Pygmalion. Among his most famous works are: Candida (1894), Arms and the Man (1894) and Man and Superman (1902-03).

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