Customer Service - Phone: +852 2989-9147 or Email: sales@shopinhk.com
Search:
Login: Password:  OR 
Hong Kong Online Shopping :: Bookstore :: Literature and Fiction :: United States :: 0140481346 :: Death of A Salesman

  Categories

  Manufacturers

  Special

  Help
We accept American Express, Visa, Master Card and Diners.

  

Death of A Salesman :: 0140481346

Death of A Salesman
Click to enlarge Click To View Detailed Image(s)
Product ID: 72585

Publication Date: 1998-10-06
Author(s):Arthur Miller
Edition: 1
Binding: Paperback
Number of Pages: 144
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
ISBN: 0140481346
ISBN13: 9780140481341

Details
 
SKU 0140481346
Weight 0.10 Kgs
Price: HK$96.00

  0%

Stock Details and Delivery
 
WarehouseStockEstimated Delivery Date
Hong KongNo item(s) available
US Warehouse 1269 item(s) available9th September 2008 (Tue)
US Warehouse 2251 item(s) available12th September 2008 (Fri)
On OrderNo item(s) on order
 
When will you get your order:
  • Products in our Hong Kong warehouse are delivered within 2 business days. Click here to list items in stock, or consider sending a gift certficate if you're looking for last minute gifts.
  • Items in stock in our US warehouses will be delivered around the displayed dates.
  • Items on order will be delivered as soon as they arrive in one of our warehouses. This can take 2-8 weeks or longer for unpublished titles. Please contact us if you need more information.
Options
 
Quantity

        


Customers Also Bought

The Great Gatsby

Description

Product Description
Arthur Miller's 1949 Death of a Salesman has sold 11 million copies, and Willy Loman didn't make all those sales on a smile and a shoeshine. This play is the genuine article--it's got the goods on the human condition, all packed into a day in the life of one self-deluded, self-promoting, self-defeating soul. It's a sturdy bridge between kitchen-sink realism and spectral abstraction, the facts of particular hard times and universal themes. As Christopher Bigsby's mildly interesting afterword in this 50th-anniversary edition points out (as does Miller in his memoir, Timebends), Willy is closely based on the playwright's sad, absurd salesman uncle, Manny. But of course Miller made Manny into Everyman, and gave him the name of the crime commissioner Lohmann in Fritz Lang's angst-ridden 1932 Nazi parable, The Testament of Dr. Mabuse.

The tragedy of Loman the all-American dreamer and loser works eternally, on the page as on the stage. A lot of plays made history around 1949, but none have stepped out of history into the classic canon as Salesman has. Great as it was, Tennessee Williams's work can't be revived as vividly as this play still is, all over the world. (This edition has edifying pictures of Lee J. Cobb's 1949 and Brian Dennehy's 1999 performances.) It connects Aristotle, The Great Gatsby, On the Waterfront, David Mamet, and the archetypal American movie antihero. It even transcends its author's tragic flaw of pious preachiness (which undoes his snoozy The Crucible, unfortunately his most-produced play).

No doubt you've seen Willy Loman's story at least once. It's still worth reading. --Tim Appelo

Editorial Descriptions are usually submitted by the manufacturers, publishers and authors. Contact us if you are one of them, and wish to change the above description.

Reviews

  

Customer feedback

Product rating


Voting

Rate It!


Customer Reviews


Author: Guest
Death of a Salesman is a modern masterpiece; and Arthur Miller's greatest work I have yet to come across. The characters, although strange and sometimes deplorable, are some of the most interesting I have seen.



Willy Loman, an average man haunted by everyone and everything in his life, is a wonderfully deep character. Miller's skills shine brightly in this character alone. I actually backtracked at one point and realized that within the span of a couple pages I had gone from absolutely despising Willy to completely sympathizing with him.



Happy and Biff are both interesting characters as well. It's obvious from the beginning that they share both a deep bond and several characteristics. Their relationships with Willy, while hugely different, are also wonderfully intertwined. The fact that they are both womanizers only helps to add to their allure.



To be completely honest, I actually had trouble writing this review. Simply put, it's one of the most profound and affecting pieces of literature I have ever had the great pleasure of reading. Almost every character could supply hours of thought and discussion. This is truly a must read for anyone and everyone.


Author: Guest
"Death of a Salesman" is often referred to as a criticism of capitalism or as an exploration of the dark side of the "American Dream". There may be some truth in this idea. The central character, Willy Loman, is a man who has worked hard for the same company for over thirty years. According to all the tenets of capitalism, his qualities of diligence and loyalty should have been a guarantee of success, and yet his life ends in failure when he is dismissed by his employers without a word of thanks. Arthur Miller is sometimes attacked by political conservatives on account of his left-wing opinions, but in my view such an attitude is misplaced, as he was generally better as a writer of human drama than as a political propagandist. "The Crucible", for example, remains a great play even today, worth reading or watching not as an attack on McCarthyism but as a powerful drama with the strong figure of John Proctor, a flawed but genuinely tragic hero, at its centre. Similarly, the human side of Willy Loman's downfall is much more interesting than any political lessons that might be drawn from it; the play concentrates far more on Willy's relationships with his family than it does on that with his boss Howard Wagner.



Willy is a much weaker character than Proctor. He is the salesman of the play's title, a man in his early sixties, approaching retirement. Despite his long service, travelling from his New York base all over New England in the service of his employers, he has never enjoyed great success in his job. He is in financial difficulties, struggling to pay the mortgage on his house and the instalments on the consumer goods- refrigerator, vacuum cleaner, car- which were becoming popular in the forties but which represented a major commitment, even in middle class households. In order to make ends meet, he has taken to borrowing from his old friend Charley. His sense of failure, however, does not derive solely from his unsuccessful career. He also sees himself as having failed in his private life. Although his marriage to his loyal wife Linda has survived, despite the fact that he has on occasions been unfaithful to her, his relations with his two sons are strained. Biff, the elder, showed promise when young in both the academic and sporting fields, but failed to win a place at university after failing a maths exam at school, and since has become a rootless drifter, alternating between dead-end jobs and petty crime. Biff has been particularly alienated from his father since discovering one of Willy's affairs. Happy, the younger, has been more successful than Biff in his career, but in his private life is a selfish, cynical womaniser.



Willy is a character much given to violent mood swings, alternating between exuberant over-optimism and despairing pessimism. The younger Willy's optimism was largely focussed on his own prospects, believing that he had a talent for making himself "well liked" which would lead to a brilliant career. The older Willy's hopes are mostly focussed on his sons, especially Biff, whom he still believes (in the teeth of all the evidence) to be capable of great things. When his son disappoints him, Willy turns on him fiercely, accusing him of being a "lazy bum". Biff's lack of success in life does indeed derive partly from his own weaknesses, but Willy's unrealistic expectations are also partly to blame. There may be a connection between Willy's job and his capacity for self-delusion. As Charley says of him "A salesman's got to dream. It comes with the territory".



The play is written in two acts and a brief epilogue, but without any further formal divisions into scenes. On a number of occasions the action switches abruptly from the present into the past, as the characters act out episodes from earlier in Willy's life. Some of these episodes, in fact, may exist only in Willy's imagination, particularly those involving his older brother Ben, who is now dead although that does not prevent him from making several appearances. He seems to have been a wealthy man, although there are two versions of how he acquired his wealth, one involving business dealings in Alaska, the other diamond mining in Africa. Ben, in fact, is not really a character in his own right, but rather functions as a symbol of the failures and missed opportunities in Willy's life. This structure can make the play rather confusing when read from the printed page, but any confusion is generally quickly resolved in a well-directed stage or screen performance. (One particularly good filmed version is that starring Dustin Hoffman from 1985).



There is much more to the play than a critique of the capitalist economy or of the American way of life. It is also a character study and an exploration of the relationships within a family, especially father-son relationships (which was also an important theme of Miller's "All My Sons"). On a wider level it touches on the plight of the elderly, especially those whom society no longer seems to value, on the human need, too often disappointed, to aspire to a better life, and on the gap between appearance and reality. It is a play that deserves the high reputation it has acquired since it was written in the late forties.




Author: Guest
"Death of a Salesman" is as succulent as a borscht and smacks red of youthful idealism. Miller clearly expresses his political views through Loman's struggle to slice his own American pirog as a traveling salesman. Views that would later earn Miller a deserved trip before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Willy (or as I like to call him, Wily) expresses nearly bipolar behavior during the course of a day while attempting to sell some widget or another. The point is, Miller displays an utter contempt at the American Way of Life and creates this unbelievable, paper-thin character to undermine the good, wholesome values of capitalism.



Oh, poor Wily Salesman has a rough day. Can't quite cut it in the real world. Well, tough. Am I really supposed to care about some nobody salesman that no one else cares about either? Does Arthur make any semblance of a point by examining the efficiency of capitalism? The answer, quite clearly, is 'No'.



I half-expected this play to come printed on pink stock. Miller casts such a liberal, ivory-tower light on his subject that I almost read this as farce. Lo Mein's timely demise couldn't come too quickly for me, as I was sick of Miller's blatant manipulation of the audience's emotions to garner sympathy for his unpatriotic views.



Don't let Miller peddle this schlog to you.


Author: Guest
I am an outside sales rep so I have a lot of drive time...I put that time to good use by listening to Death of a Salesman on tape.

It is an amazing, story that is still relevant today. It is a nice reminder that the worth of oneself is not measured merely in wealth and career accomplishments.




Author: Guest
For anyone who is appreciative of the great work of Arthur Miller, it is beneficial to have a collection of scripts of his plays. This item was excellent. The print was easily read (as I am up in years and my eyesight isn't what it was 40 years ago). I appreciate that the script I received from Amazon was not in the usual very small print. For this reason alone, I give this a top rating and recommend it to my associates.

Send to Friend

  

Send to friend

Your name: *
Your e-mail: *
Recipient's email: *

Send to friend
 

  Your cart

  Gift Registry

  In Association With




  Offers & Ads








Users online:  122 unregistered customer(s)
Copyright © 2004-2008 GeoClicks - Unit 715, Tower B, Southmark, 11 Yip Hing Street, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong Kong