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Drama General

The Overwhelming

A Play

by (author) J.T. Rogers

Publisher
Farrar Straus & Giroux
Initial publish date
Oct 2007
Category
General
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780865479746
    Publish Date
    Oct 2007
    List Price
    $16

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Description

As a middle-aged American academic who desperately needs to publish a book in order to gain tenure, Jack Exley leaps at the chance to go to Rwanda to write about his old college classmate Dr. Joseph Gasana, who has in the intervening years has specialized in treating children stricken by AIDS. But when Jack, along with his African-American second wife, Linda, and his disaffected teenage son, Geoffrey, arrive in Kigali in the fall of 1994, they are not only unable to find Joseph, they are unable to find anyone who will even admit to having known the Tutsi doctor. Befriended by both a cynical American diplomat and a perhaps too-helpful Hutu political powerbroker, Jack and his family slowly, then urgently, become enmeshed in the tension and terror, the professional risks and personal betrayals, that they ultimately realize mark the start of a genocidal war—a horror that they can sense but cannot comprehend or control.

InThe Overwhelming,J.T. Rogers has written a play that is both a brilliantly crafted piece of writing and a tense, suspenseful exploration of one of the great human tragedies of our time. It will have its U.S. premiere off-Broadway in November 2007.

About the author

Contributor Notes

J. T. Rogers is the author of several plays, includingMadagascar, which received two awards for best play. He received a NEA/TCG Theatre Residency in 2004 and has been a guest artist or lecturer at the North Carolina School of the Arts, the University of Utah, and Truman State University in Missouri. He lives in Brooklyn.

Editorial Reviews

“A gripping political thriller . . . captures the sense of terror when the division between political discussion and murder is membrane-thin.” —Rachel Halliburton, Time Out London

“The theatre is a tribunal whose task is to present the bloody evidence and ask what you think of yourself as a member of the human race. I have seldom seen this task performed with such unprejudiced but devestating power.” —John Peter, The Sunday Times

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