Vine: An Urban Legend
by Michael Williams
Reviewed by Mallory Heart Reviews
I found “Vine: An Urban Legend” a difficult and very complex novel, even for a reader such as myself who had a long-ago University degree in Literature. Couched in the framework of Greek tragedy, “Vine” focuses on an amateur theatre director, Stephen Thorne, who decides to direct a Greek tragedy, so that this is a “play within a play within a play,” in a sense. Stephen has his own life issues, but unbeknownst to him, he is not drifting aimlessly on the sea of human life. Rather, he is directed by one of the gods, and his fate is just that: not aimless, but instead fated.
by Michael Williams
Reviewed by Mallory Heart Reviews
I found “Vine: An Urban Legend” a difficult and very complex novel, even for a reader such as myself who had a long-ago University degree in Literature. Couched in the framework of Greek tragedy, “Vine” focuses on an amateur theatre director, Stephen Thorne, who decides to direct a Greek tragedy, so that this is a “play within a play within a play,” in a sense. Stephen has his own life issues, but unbeknownst to him, he is not drifting aimlessly on the sea of human life. Rather, he is directed by one of the gods, and his fate is just that: not aimless, but instead fated.
Reviewed by Mallory Heart Reviews
Review: Vine: An Urban Legend by Michael Williams
Reviewed by Unknown
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10:30 AM
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Reviewed by Unknown
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10:30 AM
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