Reviews tagging 'Injury/Injury detail'

We Play Ourselves by Jen Silverman

4 reviews

siebensommer's review against another edition

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emotional tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

the thing nobody tells you is that suddenly you are a person whose unguarded heart now moves through the world, embedded inside a small and breakable body. You want to stuff it back inside you, almost every day you want to swallow it whole. But you can't, and day by day it gets bigger, more unwieldy.

Making a play is like this. It is only different in that your heart, which is now moving in the world outside of you, does not reside in the body of a singular creature. It resides inside the bodies of a strange troupe of individuals who have signed up for this ritual. Who, by agreement, have become something precious and unnamable. You will love these people savagely, beyond language, for the moment in time in which all of you are bound to each other. If they love you similarly, it will be with similar caveats.

There is no intimacy like the intimacy of breathing life into something together, mingling breath. There's nothing like sharing creation. For the months in which we are assembled, the only people we feel connected to are the ones who joined us inside this world. There might be a legal contract that says we have all agreed to play pretend for eight or ten weeks, after which this will stop. But we are human and we forget how time works- Our entire lives are possible only because we have taught ourselves this trick of lying about time. If we thought about the truth-that every morning we wake up is a morning bringing us closer to death- we wouldn't get out of bed. So we live in this room together with a headlong intensity that approximates
"forever," because these are the moments that make us want to live at all. And so, somewhere between how much we need each other and how singularly we share a world that no one else shares, we forget that we will not always share this one impenetrable world. And because we forget, we love.
[...]
Tell me you don't understand that, and I won't believe you.

oh my god

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seekittyread's review against another edition

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dark reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.0


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lpdx's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0


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machinations's review against another edition

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emotional reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

wouldn’t had given this a second try without the multiple recommendations from various trusted sources. yes, it’s about theatre and it should’ve hit me harder as a playwright, but it ended up hitting me harder as a constant fuck-up obsessed with “achievements.” (there’s a really killer about LOVING the creation of theatre in the first few pages that really resonated, but) ultimately this is about practicing compassion and tapping into those feral emotions that make us human.

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