Product Details
All My Sons (Hereford Plays)

All My Sons (Hereford Plays)
By Mr Arthur Miller

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Product Description

All my Sons: set by NICCEA at GCSE. Hereford Plays: the best of twentieth-century drama for study and performance. A set of plays that are perfect for class reading and performance, providing effective solutions to today?s teaching needs. Offers the widest range of texts for GCSE and A-Level available. Each play is supported by practical advice and classroom activities, while many have large casts and an equal mix of parts for boys and girls. Meets the varied needs of GCSE and A-Level, helping you to make exactly the right choice for your students. As well as an unrivalled choice of plays for coursework, we also publish more set plays than anyone else. Durable hardback covers and long-lasting sewn binding, so they last for many years.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #122667 in Books
  • Published on: 1971-10-25
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 80 pages

Customer Reviews

Simply Wonderful5
I am doing this text for part of my AS Level and it is a great text, it is simple to read but at the same time has clever little comments that you could easily miss which are symbolic and very telling. Shame there does not seem to be any available copies of either of the two versions that I know have been made - Amazon please try and stock one of these items, it would certainly be appreciated by many AS Level students who have not seen a dramatised version, after all this is a play and not book. However, the play is a real marvel and is well worth a read.

Awesome Play5
What goes around comes around in this beautifully crafted emotional ride. The play centres on greed and guilt but has a complex outer web of haunting and chilling events. The thunderous conclusion is a brutal reminder of the frailty of life.

Do unto others as you'd have done unto yourself5
This epic play shows us that we will pay for our actions in the end. The brilliant webs woven by Miller keep the reader's mind racing from one character to the next throughout. As the play progresses we learn about the guilt and hauntings of each individual - from the obvious to the subtle. Slowly and with drastic emotion, these webs fall apart and the frightening skeletons are revealed. The brutal end is a thunderous warning to us all.