MouthShut.com Would Like to Send You Push Notifications. Notification may includes alerts, activities & updates.

OTP Verification

Enter 4-digit code
For Business
×
transparentImg
Upload Photo
Look Back in Anger - John Osborne Image

MouthShut Score

100%
5 

Readability:

Story:

×
Supported file formats : jpg, png, and jpeg


Cancel

I feel this review is:

Fake
Genuine

To justify genuineness of your review kindly attach purchase proof
No File Selected

Look Back in Anger - John Osborne Reviews

d_1481MouthShut Verified Member
India
A book which needs to be read and re-read
May 20, 2016 09:50 PM 1927 Views (via Mobile)

This book written by John Osborne needs to be read by all book-lovers especially today's youth. Though the story is set in mid-20th century England, it is very relevant now also given the unemployment and mental crisis the youth faces these days in India.


The love story too is beautiful.though it's not a typical boy-meets-girl story. This book will make you look back in anger to various things- relationships, personal decisions and your own self.


One may find the protagonist, Jimmy Porter to be an an abusive person but a second reading may help in better understanding not only Jimmy's but also one's own insecurities.


Rebel without a clue
Jan 27, 2004 09:21 PM 8340 Views

Angst. There, in one word is what this play is all about.


Many of my friends who’ve read this book recently, find it a trifle clichéd.


The point is, Look Back in Anger has been copied so many times over, in so many countries around the world, that it seems to the modern reader, just one of many.


What people forget is that this is play is THE ORIGINAL.


So if readers find similarity with James Dean’s rebellious character, or (for Indian readers) Amitabh Bachhan’s portrayal of the angry young man, know this – this is the play, which started it all.


But even then, it still remains one of the best depictions of middle-class angst. Of the unique pointless torment that millions of young men and women go through, every generation.


Read the play, if not for anything else, but for the characters. So real, that they take up flesh and blood, right in your head. So real, that you feel that you’ve known them for years.


And better still; enact the play with your friends. (It needs but few character actors.) It will, and I speak from experience, exorcise quite a few ghosts lurking in your soul.


YOUR RATING ON

Look Back in Anger - John Osborne
1
2
3
4
5

Recent Questions and Answers on Look Back in Anger - John Osborne

500

Discuss the play as a dark comedy

Dec 16, 2021

By: abubakarrkamara866

Answers: 1

500

Why is Jimmy Porter terribly angry in act 1?

May 11, 2020

By: adoezra3

Answers: 2

500

X