James Martin Charlton

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James Martin Charlton

Goodreads Author


Born
in The United Kingdom
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Member Since
September 2007

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James Martin Charlton is an award-winning playwright, theatre director and filmmaker. His plays include Fat Souls, Coming Up, ecstasy + Grace and Coward.

Oberammagau Passion Play 2022

 

 


Visiting the famous Passion Play at Oberammergau is, I should imagine, on numerous people’s bucket lists. I have wanted to see the production since I first read of the play and the vow that inspired it in my teens. The play has been performed at (usually) ten year intervals since 1634; the performance now habitually falls on years ending in 0, although the 2020 production has been delayed b

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Published on July 17, 2022 07:48
Average rating: 3.43 · 7 ratings · 1 review · 6 distinct works
Story: The Heart of the Matter

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3.60 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2007
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Coward

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2013
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Reformation

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Fat Souls: A Play With Mask...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2015
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Divine Vision: William Blak...

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The Pilgrim's Progress: Aft...

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More books by James Martin Charlton…
Vagabond:  A Memoir
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On the Soul and t...
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Game of Thrones v...
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by Brian A. Pavlac (Goodreads Author)
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James’s Recent Updates

The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans by Anonymous
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Pop Scars by Anthony Kavanagh
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This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
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My first Hemingway, and I didn't enjoy it. I think it may be the worst "great" novel I've ever read. The flat, affectless tone; the barely engaging writing; the boring central characters; the under-differentiated secondary characters; the truly dread ...more
James rated a book it was ok
The Play of Hadrian VII by Peter Luke
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The Play of Hadrian VII is a good example of a work that was highly successful in its original production but is now almost impossible to imagine being revived. An adaptation of a baroque Edwardian cult novel, it was an enormous hit in London and New ...more
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A Confession and Other Religious Writings by Leo Tolstoy
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A Confession and Other Religious Writings collects four of Tolstoy’s short theological tracts from his later life, each wrestling with the human relationship to society, others, and God. A Confession is the most personal: it describes a period of psy ...more
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The Crucifixion of Jesus by David Tombs
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This is a challenging and well-argued study that explores a strand of contemporary theology and historical Jesus scholarship concerned with the sexualised dimensions of crucifixion in the ancient world.
David Tombs, a theologian at the University of O
...more
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The Gates of Europe by Serhii Plokhy
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One of the great benefits of reading history—perhaps the greatest—is that it puts the present into perspective. Whatever horrors are unfolding now, they have happened before, often worse. That thought stayed with me as I worked through Serhii Plokhy’ ...more
More of James's books…
William Blake
“The characters of Chaucer's Pilgrims are the characters which compose all ages and nations. As one age falls, another rises, different to mortal sight, but to immortals only the same; for we see the same characters repeated again and again, in animals, vegetables, minerals, and in men. Nothing new occurs in identical existence; Accident ever varies, Substance can never suffer change nor decay.

Of Chaucer's characters, as described in his Canterbury Tales, some of the names or titles are altered by time, but the characters themselves for ever remain unaltered; and consequently they are the physiognomies or lineaments of universal human life, beyond which Nature never steps. Names alter, things never alter.”
William Blake, William Blake Seen in My Visions /anglais

Bob Dylan
“I like to stay a part of that stuff that don’t change. Actually, it’s not that difficult - people still love and they still hate, they still marry and have children, still slaves in their minds to their desires, still slap each other in the face, and say ‘honey can you turn off the light’ just like they did in ancient Greece. What’s changed? When did Abraham break his father's idols? I think it was last Tuesday.”
Bob Dylan, Biograph

Northrop Frye
“It is impossible to think of an ideal human life except as an alternation of individual and social life, as equally a belonging and an escape.”
Northrop Frye, The Great Code: The Bible and Literature

Tom Holland
“A myth, though, is not a lie. At its most profound—as Tolkien, that devout Catholic, always argued—a myth can be true. To be a Christian is to believe that God became man and suffered a death as terrible as any mortal has ever suffered. This is why the cross, that ancient implement of torture, remains what it has always been: the fitting symbol of the Christian revolution. It is the audacity of it—the audacity of finding in a twisted and defeated corpse the glory of the creator of the universe—that serves to explain, more surely than anything else, the sheer strangeness of Christianity, and of the civilization to which it gave birth. Today, the power of this strangeness remains as alive as it has ever been. It is manifest in the great surge of conversions that has swept Africa and Asia over the past century; in the conviction of millions upon millions that the breath of the Spirit, like a living fire, still blows upon the world; and, in Europe and North America, in the assumptions of many more millions who would never think to describe themselves as Christian. All are heirs to the same revolution: a revolution that has, at its molten heart, the image of a god dead on a cross.”
Tom Holland, Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World

William S. Burroughs
“Happiness is a byproduct of function, purpose, and conflict; those who seek happiness for itself seek victory without war.”
William S. Burroughs

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