“Mr. Wilson’s powerful new play has a storytelling beginning that recalls his early work, Rimers of Eldrich … Book of Days does not just blend contradictions. It is a meditation on Joan of Arc and what would become of her today. It is about fundamentalism and honor (and dishonor and hypocrisy), the masking of evil and all manner of religious fanaticism to mask truth. . . . Mr. Wilson adroitly weaves and unravels a many-layered tale, develops complex characters and themes upon themes upon themes. Time has deepened his inimitable lyricism, sense of irony, humor gentle and wicked as well as his regard for humanity. . . . Mr. Wilson’s cosmic consciousness, intense moral concern, sense of human redemption and romantic effusion have climbed to a new peak.” –Alvin Klein, The New York Times
“No playwright is truer at conveying the work people do. . . . These basically realistic characters [are] not only themselves but also members of a fluid and flexible commenting chorus. . . . [Wilson’s] Pirandellian playfulness and Brechtian distancing, new for him, effectively convey the two-way traffic between art and life. . . . Wilson sees the world clearly and represents it without grudge-bearing or edulcoration, and keeps the play moving forward with unflagging vivacity in plot and subplots alike.” –John Simon, New York Magazine
“This Book of Days is an event. . . . Book of Days is lively storytelling by one of our best playwrights.” –Lawrence DeVine, Detroit Free Press
“A significant addition to the Lanford Wilson canon . . . his best work since 5th of July. . . . Book of Days manages to combine Wilson’s signature character-based whimsy with an atypically strong narrative book and politically charged underpinnings.” –Chris Jones, Variety
“Many elements contribute to the dense, delicious texture of Book of Days . . . above all, there’s the language. . . . You could go to the theater night after night and never hear language so supple. In Book of Days, you hear nothing but.” –Judith Newmark, St. Louis Post Dispatch
“Its real beauty lies in the poetry of the ordinary, in the unexpected turns life takes. Here is a chronicle of life in a small town, laid out day by surprising day, as Wilson explores such subjects as ambition and the fear of change. . . . It is what it says it is: a book of days, a diary, a story to be told by characters at once good and bad, admirable and not. It’s a snapshot of small-town American life at the end of the millennium–in some ways not so different from big city life, in other ways light years distant.” –Scott Miller, In Theater
“[Book of Days] is a daring combination of humor, melodrama and intrigue, resulting in an entertaining night of theater. . . . [Wilson] is known as a subtle Chekhovian writer chronicling the quiet lives of Midwesterners. He constructs his plays on character rather than plot.” –E. Kyle Minor, New Haven Register
“A wonderfully executed black comedy that burrows slowly beneath the cherry surface of contemporary American small town life, and down into the darker impulses that underpin it. You don’t know whether to laugh or be appalled by much of what you see, so you laugh and are appalled. But never are you bored.” –Alistair Highet, Hartford Advocate
Praise for Lanford Wilson
“From his earliest plays to his latest, Lanford Wilson has been firmly committed to the free expression of the individual spirit, no matter how nonconformist or even prodigal that spirit may seem to be.” –Mel Gussow, The New York Times
“A writer who illuminates the deepest dramas of American life with poetry and compassion.” –Frank Rich, from the Introduction to Lanford Wilson: 21 Short Plays
“Lanford Wilson’s writing leaves an indelible fingerprint of humanity for the reader to detect with gasps of delight.” –Marshall W. Mason
“From the beginning, Lanford Wilson has had a fabulous ear for American dialogue. . . . He could conjure the mood in a line or two or even in just a pause.” –Booklist