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Books with author R. C. Sherriff

  • Journey's End A Play In Three Acts

    R. C. Sherriff

    Paperback (Kessinger Pub Co, April 30, 2004)
    1929. Sherriff's play about life in the trenches in the First World War. This powerful play endures in the tradition of great drama because until wars are at an end, the human race will continue to question what our reaction should be to the cycle of killing and being killed in the name of foreign policy. Sherriff's play creates real characters, some of whom deal better than others with the stresses of warfare in the trenches, the close proximity of the enemy and the pointlessness and inevitability of dying.
  • Journeys End

    R. C. Sherriff

    Paperback (Heinemann, June 1, 1989)
    One of a series presenting a wide choice of 20th-century drama. The books offer scene-by-scene analysis, structured questions and assignment suggestions for GCSE. This play depicts life in a front-line trench in the First World War.
  • Journey's End: A Play In Three Acts

    R. C. Sherriff

    (Coward-McCann, Jan. 1, 1940)
    None
  • JOURNEY'S END

    R.C. Sherriff

    Hardcover (Penguin Books, Jan. 1, 1983)
    Rare hardbound printing.
  • Journey's End

    R. C. Sherriff

    (Penguin Books Ltd, Oct. 26, 2000)
    None
  • Modern Classics Journeys End

    R C Sherriff

    Hailed by George Bernard Shaw as 'useful [corrective] to the romantic conception of war', R.C. Sherriff's Journey's End is an unflinching vision of life in the trenches towards the end of the First World War, published in Penguin Classics. Set in the First World War, Journey's End concerns a group of British officers on the front line and opens in a dugout in the trenches in France. Raleigh, a new eighteen-year-old officer fresh out of English public school, joins the besieged company of his friend and cricketing hero Stanhope, and finds him dramatically changed. Laurence Olivier starred as Stanhope in the first performance of Journey's End in 1928; the play was an instant stage success and remains a remarkable anti-war classic. R.C. Sherriff (1896-1975) joined the army shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, serving as a captain in the East Surrey regiment. After the war, an interest in amateur theatricals led him to try his hand at writing. Following rejection by many theatre managements, Journey's End was given a single performance by the Incorporated Stage Society, in which Lawrence Olivier took the lead role. The play's enormous success enabled Sherriff to become a full-time writer, with plays such as Badger's Green (1930), St Helena (1935), and The Long Sunset (1955); though he is also remembered as a screenplay writer, for films such as The Invisible Man (1933), Goodbye Mr Chips (1933) and The Dam Busters (1955). If you enjoyed Journey's End, you might like Robert Graves's Goodbye to All That, available in Penguin Modern Classics. 'Its unrelenting tension, and its regard for human decency in a vast world of human waste, are impressive and, even now, moving' Clive Barnes
  • Journey's end,: A play in three acts,

    R. C Sherriff

    Unknown Binding (Coward-McCann, March 8, 1934)
    None
  • Journey's End: Play

    R. C. Sherriff

    (Samuel French Ltd, Sept. 13, 2010)
    None
  • Journey's End

    E R Sherriff, R. C; Wood

    (Heinemann Educational Publishers, Jan. 1, 1983)
    None
  • Journey's End: Play

    R. C. Sherriff

    (Penguin Books Ltd, Jan. 1, 1722)
    None