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Rachel the Book Harlot's Reviews > Betrayal

Betrayal by Harold Pinter
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bookshelves: academic, literary-classics-general-fiction, play

This probably works better on the stage than it does on the page. Frankly, I was disappointed.

True to its title, Betrayal is a story about betrayal and deception. The play is centered on three people: Emma, Robert, and Jerry. Emma, who is married to Robert, has had a long-term affair with Robert's best friend Jerry. The opening scene is of Emma and Jerry meeting for a drink two years after their affair has ended. The play then works its way chronologically backwards in time, feeding us more details of their tangled relationships with each new scene.

The play provides a perspective into the way in which we might betray and deceive others, as well as the way in which we might betray and deceive ourselves. I thought it was an interesting look at the attempt to hold onto relationships even though they might not fulfill us or make us happy. Fear of change? Habit? Routine? Boredom? It was interesting watching the characters stumble through their relationships, sometimes as if on automatic pilot.

The best aspect of the play was in how it was structured: in reverse order from the end of the affair to the very beginning. I thought that was truly well done. In fact, what I found so interesting was how the characterizations were developed. By providing you with the ending first, the author allows you to make judgments about these characters, then challenges those judgments by providing more and more insight into their past.

Still, despite these interesting elements, I thought that overall the story was unremarkable.

Final Rating: 3 stars
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Reading Progress

July 4, 2014 – Started Reading
July 4, 2014 – Shelved
July 4, 2014 – Shelved as: academic
July 4, 2014 – Shelved as: literary-classics-general-fiction
July 4, 2014 – Shelved as: play
July 6, 2014 –
page 49
35.51%
July 8, 2014 –
page 87
63.04%
July 8, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-1 of 1 (1 new)

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José Arturo The whole point of playwriting is to be represented on stage. Playwriting is not created to work on "the page". Reading theatre is an invitation to evoke the stage inside our minds. Kind of directing a version of the play through imagination, maybe even act a little in our solitude, or reading out loud with friends. Maybe you would find more what the author wants to say instead of your own judgement if you read it out loud, try to act it, and loosen up. Try to enjoy.


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