Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Street Of Crocodiles
The Street Of Crocodiles | Bruno Schulz
3 posts | 13 read | 15 to read
"Complicite not only open our eyes to Bruno Schulz but turn his densely impressionistic stories into a piece of vividly imaginative theatre" (Michael Billington, Guardian)The Street of Crocodiles is inspired by the life and stories of Polish writer Bruno Schulz (1892-1942). Originally co-produced by Théâtre de Complicité and the Royal National Theatre it opened at the Cottesloe in 1992 and toured all over the world until 1994. The original production was remounted in 1998 and played in New York, Toronto, Minneapolis and Tokyo before opening at the Queen's Theatre London in January 1999."This astounding production creates a vision of provincial Poland in the early part of the century as a restless ocean of unending flux...the miracle of Complicite's interpretation of Schulz's stories...is its ability to give specific theatrical life to this perceptual anarchy...when you leave the theatre you expect the ground beneath your feet to give way." (New York Times)
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
2BR02B
post image

Well?

llwheeler 😂😂 no thanks! I'll go to a nice crocodile-free library instead 7y
Eggbeater Haha crocodiles are mean and I can't carry that many books so I'm out. 7y
TobeyTheScavengerMonk I would 100% do this and would 86% get eaten. 7y
See All 7 Comments
Dr.Who_number10 Backpacks!😂 I would totally do it! I would just have to get in shape first🤔 7y
Zelma At first I thought I absolutely would, then realized that I can‘t read if I‘m dead. So no, I‘ll stick with a croc- free bookstore. 😉 7y
Beachesnbooks Crocodiles can move really fast! Realistically I don't think I could outrun one 😂 7y
OrangeMooseReads Yes without hesitation 7y
52 likes7 comments
blurb
SubwayBookReview
Street of Crocodiles | Bruno Schulz
post image

Thu: "It's a book of short stories told from the perspective of a young boy and set in a Polish city. I read a profile of the author and was touched by his story. He was a writer and living in a Jewish ghetto in Poland. An SS officer protected him until one day he was shot dead in the street by that officer's rival. What's amazing about his book is that it's fantastic – like you're an ant and are looking at a dazzling storefront full of lights."

50 likes5 stack adds
review
MelanieAnn
Pickpick

Beautiful book!

Hobbinol This is one of my favorite books 8y
2 likes2 stack adds1 comment