
Reviews

Imagine writing something that can be funny for more than 2000 years

This reminds me of my great grandma telling me stories about her and her brothers growing up

pls i remember how hilarious my classmates presented their discussion of this literary piece

Irreverent and perfectly funny. This is the best translation yet

This was such a comic relief after weeks of Homer. This play is lighthearted and funny, though it deals with several important subjects. If it weren't on my syllabus, I probably wouldn't have heard of it for a long while. But I'm glad I got a chance to read it, though I'd be interested in getting hold of a more traditionally translated edition. I'm not sure I loved the liberties this translator took with the text.

Interesting. Really funny how all the Greek women were messing with the men to try to get them to stop fighting.

Actually it was pretty funny to read. I was kinda surprised of the topic but i did like it !

I despise sexual humor, and that's basically what this play is about. I find this kind of humor crude, vile, and not funny. This play's views of women, sex, and marriage are disgusting. Literally everything in this play hinted at sex. If you read this in a literature class, beware.

Initially, I had ignorantly expected fiction, so this was a departure from my usual reading. I found it a little slow, but powerful at times. The long section about communism that wrapped the book up interested me less than the rest. Reading some of the episodes described in the book that took place nearly a century ago and connecting them to very similar racially motivated brutality in the present day was sobering.

This book first came on my radar when I was scrolling through my library's electronic collection and came across the 75th anniversary edition. I couldn't put this book down. Black Boy is Richard Wright's autobiography of growing up Black in the South during the Jim Crow era. Born in 1908, we got to see what life was like in the early part of the 1900's through the eyes of a Black men reflecting on his life. It was incredibly well-written and I couldn't put it down. Reading this book was an experience. There was a quote that has continued to stick with me since reading this book: "The cops beat up some demonstrators today". This was said in the post office in 1929. I got chills reading this (and honestly writing this review and revisiting this has given me chills again). We're still seeing this today. As my boyfriend has shared, nothing has changed except the date on the calendar. There are several trigger warnings with this book; most notably racism. However, I do think the time spent reading this is well worth it.













