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list price: $16.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Drama
published: Apr 2012
ISBN:9780889227101
publisher: Talonbooks

The Book of Esther

by Leanna Brodie

tagged: gay & lesbian
Description

It is June 1981: the farm debt crisis. Pride Toronto’s first parade. Everything is changing, including fifteen-year-old Esther, who runs away to the city to escape the family farm. With the help of a brash young hustler and a gay activist who shelters street kids, she confronts her conservative Christian parents—farmers on the brink of financial ruin—and begins to find her way home. Acclaimed playwright Leanna Brodie excels with this heart-warming coming-of-age—and coming-out—drama.
Cast of two women and three men.

About the Author

Leanna Brodie is a playwright and actor who grew up unilingual in a small Ontario village and now translates some of the most acclaimed Québécois and Canadian playwrights of our time. Her most recent work includes Rébecca Déraspe's I Am William (Stratford Festival, Théâtre le Clou) and You Are Happy (GCTC, Red Theater Chicago); Catherine Léger's I Lost My Husband! (Gateway Theatre/Ruby Slippers Theatre, Persephone Theatre); and Mohsen El Gharbi's Omi Mouna (Impact Festival, Infinithéâtre). For information on upcoming projects with David Paquet, Rébecca Déraspe, Fanny Britt, Philippe Soldevila, Olivier Sylvestre, Sébastien Harrisson, Angela Konrad, Anaïs Pellin, and others, visit leannabrodie.com.

Editorial Reviews

“The issue is simple—as black-and-white as a Holstein cow ... But, happily, The Book of Esther is more than a simple catalogue of controversial, or at least provocative, subjects. When the play opens, the forces that divide—ignorance, prejudice, intolerance, hypocrisy and arrogance—are given free rein. At play’s end, however, the forces that bind—understanding, compassion, tolerance, honesty and love—assert themselves.”
— www.therecord.com


“There were audible gasps in the audience as the play’s teenage anti-hero, A.D., spouted off his anti-religious diatribes. Some of his dialogue was so politically incorrect that, if an adult had spoken the lines, it would border on hate-mongering. But that is the conflict situation that Leanna Brodie has set up in her play.”
Globe & Mail


“For those who fear yet another gay diatribe wrapped in a religious title, Leanna Brodie's The Book of Esther is not that play. Set in both the urban and rural landscapes of the 1980s, the work stands in the ongoing Canadian tradition of drama with characters trying to forge their identities and, by extension, define the nation, as well. Whether or not one agrees with the opinions of the characters is beside the point. Brodie is exploring the possibility of a Canada where the embattled farmer, the gay urbanite, and runaway teen-agers can find themselves in this mosaic of ours, through mutual respect …”
— Dr. Lloyd Arnett


“Like The Vic, Leanna Brodie's play The Book of Esther is filled with tenderness, heart, and humour. It is also an eloquent plea for understanding. It posits that people who feel they are very much on the opposite ends of the belief spectrum can learn to understand human difference. Are her dreams possible to realize in reality? I'm not sure, but one must admire her skill as a writer, and her ambition as a dreamer.”
— Sky Gilbert

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