---
product_id: 2479967
title: "Arcadia (Faber Drama) Paperback – May 10, 1993"
brand: "tom stoppard"
price: "฿1634"
currency: THB
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 9
url: https://www.desertcart.co.th/products/2479967-arcadia-faber-drama-paperback-may-10-1993
store_origin: TH
region: Thailand
---

# Arcadia (Faber Drama) Paperback – May 10, 1993

**Brand:** tom stoppard
**Price:** ฿1634
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Arcadia (Faber Drama) Paperback – May 10, 1993 by tom stoppard
- **How much does it cost?** ฿1634 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.th](https://www.desertcart.co.th/products/2479967-arcadia-faber-drama-paperback-may-10-1993)

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- tom stoppard enthusiasts

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## Description

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## Images

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## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Tom Stoppard is a step behind Anton Chekhov.
  

*by A***V on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 27, 2010*

With the release of "Guildenstern and Rosencratz are Dead", Tom Stoppard emerged as an original voice in a literary theater world already overpopulated by past geniuses.  Applying a deft combination of law of probability, nihilistic philosophizing, and comely tribute to the rich inheritance of Shakespeare, Stoppard articulated a definition of human death that was powerful and, most significantly, uniquely in his own words.In "Arcadia", an unmistakable shot at greatness, Stoppard expands both his thematic concerns and billing of characters to artistically express his own sensitivities to human drama.  A quick description of the play, that it involves thermodynamics, time-travelling, and the parallelism of lives being lived in two different time periods, is enough to raise a curious eyebrow from most anyone.  Does the play succeed?Yes and no.  The characters are a mixed bag of lively personalities and terrible bores.  Septimus Hodge and Thomasina Coverly dominate the play as the most engaging characters given the best lines to speak.  Their swordsman-like rapport on the algebra of determinism is rapt, and Stoppard's blending of the wonders of science in a literary world largely allergic to numbers game is a breath of fresh air.  Concurrently, how future characters Hannah Jarvis and Valentine Coverly react to the characters Septimus and Thomasina as they discover their personalities through old letters and mathematical proofs is the genius of the play, since their discovery of the past allows the audience to see how lives go on even after death and participates with our own in the present.Unfortunately, this thematic concern of life after death is fumbled a bit by ancillary characters which are necessary to clarify thematic concerns and move the plot forward but whose characterization got away from Tom somehow.  Ezra Chater is a vacuous air that takes up space, Lady Croom's purported sexual attraction to Septimus goes nowhere, and Bernard Nightingale is drawn too simply as a paperthin 'villain' meant to act principally as a foil to Hannah and Valentine's pursuit of the past without true pathos of his own.  To be considered a masterpiece, all the characters have to be legitimate realizations in their own way and the characterization has to be tight as a drum.  Stoppard sightsees too often with ancillary characters and the result is a slightly out-of-focus play.To critically speak, Stoppard's philosophy on life as presented in "Arcadia" bears too close a resemblance to Anton Chekhov and his theatrical masterpieces "Three Sisters" and "The Cherry Orchard".  Chekhov's cleverness and wit is all over the pages of "Arcadia", and the result is a voice that is only half Stoppard's own.  Stoppard handles Chekhovian dramaturgy beautifully, but the end result is not the dark energy of "Rosencratz And Guilderstern are Dead", which so painfully captures Tom Stoppard's own young voice in torment, but a sort of amalgamation between Chekhov [in the treatment of the past] and Ibsen [in the treatment of the future.]  And if a playwright speaks principally through one or even two characters in his play, then Stoppard is most assuredly speaking through Thomasina Coverly.  And yet her own philosophy and angst towards life, if we can attribute it to Tom Stoppard's own, is only a beautiful recitation of Anton Chekhov's genius sublimed with algebra, calculus, and physics.In conclusion, it's a welcome sound to hear the beauty of math and science being given their proper due diligence in a literary work instead of being lambasted as somehow apart and irrelevant to the human experience.  Science has a lot of wonderful things to relate to mankind in the field of humanities.  And it's also equally wonderful to see a playwright fully push the limits of audience patience, intelligence, and attention with sensationally dense dialogue reserved for the conversation halls of MIT.  But the play as a play, as a tragedy, does not hit its mark of greatness due to the aforementioned shortcomings.  It fails to decline from thinking to feeling, and in so doing, has no heartbreak to call its own.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    ARCADIA by Tom Stoppard
  

*by N***S on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 1, 2014*

Arcadia is a play that takes place at Sidley Park, a stately country home in Derbyshire. The play shifts back and forth between the early 19th century and modern day Sidley Park.  The action in both time periods takes place in a bare room with a large table.In the 19th century, Thomasina, the daughter of the house, is working with her tutor, Septimus Hodge; there are books and Hodge’s tortoise.  In the modern time, Hannah Jarvis, an author, is working on a book about the history of the gardens – or, more precisely, about the hermit-genius who lived in the 19th century gardens like a “garden ornament” or “pottery gnome”.  She is joined by, among others, Valentine, a son of the house, and his tortoise. In each time period, people come and go and dramas unfold. But the room and table remain constant. As the play proceeds, everything from both time periods remains on the table. The table and its contents are period neutral, and, by the end of the play, the table has become quite cluttered with objects.There are striking parallels between the two time periods. Early on, questioning her tutor whether God is a Newtonian, Thomasina asks “[a]m I the first person to have thought of this?” (p. 9).  In the modern time, Chloe asks her brother “Valentine, do you think I’m the first person to think of this?” (p. 77). There is humor. Valentine explains to Hannah how her tea is getting cold – by itself. “Your tea will end up at room temperature. What’s happening to your tea is happening to everything everywhere….It’ll take a while but we’re all going to end up at room temperature.” (p. 82). The modern day dramas involve the 19th century dramas – an attempt to sort out the past with meager historical evidence. There is poetry and duels; parks and a hermitage; heat exchange and Lord Byron. And, there is Entropy. As the play progresses, so does the chaos. Toward the end of the play, the distinct time periods begin to bleed into one another. They proceed at the same time and intertwine. Chaos ensues. The result is a fascinating, intellectual drama. Arcadia is a great read, and I hope one day to see it performed.HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Hallucinatory
  

*by G***L on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 23, 2022*

In the best way. Just read it and enjoy.  I’m not telling you anything more about it. Three more words.

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*Last updated: 2026-04-28*