The Fair Rewards


Gelesen von Greg W.

(4.2 stars; 3 reviews)

"The Fair Rewards" by Thomas Beer . . . is a really distiguished novel. The writing is far above the average: it has style and sophistication and personality, intermingled with a truly vivid show of imagination. It even borders on brilliancy, but it is a hard, cold, cynical sort of brilliancy that chills. It almost hurts . . . The title itself is indicative of cynicism. It is derived from Shakespeare's quotation, "These be the fair rewards of those that love," and it is an ironical reference, for Mark Walling, the blind, simple, loving idolater, in return for his great and unselfish devotion to Margot, reaps selfishness and ingratitude and lack of consideration. Hand in hand with the progress of Mark from country yokel to a stage producer goes the history of the American theatre. Intermingled with the imaginary characters are Clyde Fitch, Anna Held, Mr. Frohman and several other flesh-and-blood personages that strengthen the realism. (New York Times review, June 4, 1922) (6 hr 39 min)

Kapitel

Manufacture of a Personage 20:34 Gelesen von Greg W.
He Progresses 34:01 Gelesen von Greg W.
Full Bloom 43:56 Gelesen von Greg W.
Penalties 37:51 Gelesen von Greg W.
Margot 43:28 Gelesen von Greg W.
Gurdy 48:24 Gelesen von Greg W.
Todgers Intrudes 30:26 Gelesen von Greg W.
Cosmo Rand 30:59 Gelesen von Greg W.
Bubble 49:25 Gelesen von Greg W.
The Idolater 31:06 Gelesen von Greg W.
The Walling 29:04 Gelesen von Greg W.

Bewertungen

Stark yet colorful.


(3.5 stars)

As the synopsis described, this is more of a stark passion for theatrical directing; while some love & loyalty passions are provided. Seemed to end unexpectedly. The reader's brisk style seemed to make the story more jerky & stark, but okay listening. 4 * for the story, but 3 because of selected reader.