And Lady Macbeth is practically a teenager.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Yeah, seems to be a trend. Our local theater did a very convincing version on this line. Instead of being middle aged, Lord & Lady Macbeth are an ambitious young couple on the make.
Anybody else every read that James Thurber story, "The Macbeth Murder Mystery"? Fun story.
edit: and, it's online [link]
I walked out of the Branagh Hamlet at intermission. It was just the final nail in the coffin of my conviction that Branagh is a wanky actor.
Oh, lisah, I think you used the wrong quickedit up there.
oops! Sorry. I posted and then split.
kat, the part that threw you was also a little disconceting to me but I feel like he's going to have a larger role in the family. Just based on the end of the chapter.
Who knows though? I did like his point of view anyway.
Instead of being middle aged, Lord & Lady Macbeth are an ambitious young couple on the make.
I like that interpretation - I also like the interpretation of Lady Mac being significantly older than her husband. I always want to see it as a passionate marriage, even though it can work with both of them considering it a marriage of business, I think it works out best when there's fire underneath.
Instead of being middle aged, Lord & Lady Macbeth are an ambitious young couple on the make.
ooh have you seen the Shakespeare Re-Told Macbeth??? [link]
James MacAvoy as a hot young chef and Keely Hawes as his hot young ambitious wife/hostess of their restaurant.
It was pretty amazing.
ooh have you seen the Shakespeare Re-Told Macbeth?
Oh Lordy yes. I was a little disturbed by some of the meat stuff but JM shirtless in leather pants made up for it.
I read Oscar Wao recently (I think on Jesse's rec, even!) and really enjoyed it, but it did also take me a long time to finish. My favorite part was early on, when Lola is telling the story of her adolescence, running away from her family, her relationship with her mother, etc. Lola was definitely my favorite character. I found Beli's story the hardest to appreciate, and that's when I put the book down for a few weeks. But I really liked how, in the end (not terribly spoilery), it turned out to be largely Lola's story after all.
I'm glad to hear that other people found it slow-going, or took breaks, or whatever, because I assume that most people here read more "good" or at least hard stuff than I do.