With an Introduction by the author. The prolific master of suburban
mayhem has still got his mojo.--Evening Standard Time of My Life One
of Mr. Ayckbourn's most virtuosic experiments in postmodern
narrative.--Wall Street Journal Neighbourhood Watch Ayckbourn's
tartly topical, pitch-black comedy, a startling evocation of the panic
induced by nightmarish notions of "broken Britain"... An arresting,
nastily comic cautionary tale.--The Times Arrivals and Departures
Ayckbourn's genius lies in his ability to write what you might call 'sad
comedies, ' uproariously funny farces that are at second glance deeply
serious, at times despairing portraits of modern middle-class life and
its discontents. On occasion, as in Arrivals & Departures, he puts the
despair at centre stage, and what results is a play that at bottom can
no longer be called a comedy at all.--Wall Street Journal Hero's
Welcome Alan Ayckbourn is the poet laureate of missed connections. In
play after pensive, droll and acid play, Ayckbourn anatomizes how we
fail to understand and trust our lovers and friends.--Guardian A
Brief History of Women As A Brief History of Women follows Spates at
twenty year intervals through the next sixty years, it becomes
progressively more funny, more tender, more Ayckbourn... Ayckbourn knows
that moments of real connection between people are hard-won and hard to
forget.--The Times