Darkness at noon.

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Arthur Koestler: Darkness at noon. (1951)

English language

Published Dec. 13, 1951

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4 stars (17 reviews)

Alvin Theatre the Playwrights' Company presents Claude Rains in "Darkness at Noon," a new play by Sidney Kingsley, based on the novel by Arthur Koestler, with Walter J. Palance, Kim Hunter, associate producer May Kirshner, settings and lighting by Frederick Fox, costumes by Kenn Barr.

69 editions

Review of 'Darkness at Noon' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Darkness at Noon is one of a class of novels, mostly prison and interrogation things, in which all is just so hopelessly restrictive and cramped - so lacking in even the smallest victories.

So, it's not fun. And it's not particularly new.

Koestler, though, was an early-adopter communist who had suffered through such imprisonment. He developed a main character, Rubashov, who swings from stoic to frantic and foundering to scheming wildly and naturally. He's human. Smarter than most and with stronger commitment to his beliefs than most, but human.

Better than that, Koestler is able to let these same glimmers of humanity shine through all of his characters. The interrogator slips from behind his rigid facade. The never-seen fellow prisoner in the next cell, there for a political offense that doesn't mesh well with Rubashov's, can't hide the frailty and warmth he'd prefer to deny even behind a brick wall. …

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