TEMPORARY ORDER DELAYS

We’re currently experiencing temporary disruption to the availability of some titles as we move all of our books to a new warehouse, which means it may take longer than normal for your order to reach you. Click here for more information.

The Knot of the Heart
Imprint: Methuen Drama
Paperback, 128 pages ISBN: 9781408153314Publication Date:
10 Mar 2011
Size: 198mm x 129mm£11.99
First Staged:
Almeida Theatre, London, 2011

The Knot of the Heart

By David Eldridge

Paperback £11.99

A grippingly insightful play about a young woman whose social drug habit has got disastrously out of control.

Full of David Eldridge's trademark lyricism within everyday family life, The Knot of the Heart is a play where emotions are high and relationships are sensitively written.

Beautiful and privileged, Lucy is enjoying a burgeoning career in television. But her social drug habit has become a serious addiction, casting a dark shadow over her future happiness. As her charmed life begins to slip away, Lucy comes to realise that the devoted support of her family does not come without a price.

Ultimately hopeful and redemptive, The Knot of the Heart is atmospheric and poetic without undermining the all-too-believable characters' realism.

This edition is published by Methuen Drama, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.

Press Quotes

'There is no point in pretending this is an easy evening. David Eldridge’s superb new play is the most painful and persuasive account of addiction I have ever encountered.

There are scenes almost too distressing to watch, as we follow the harrowing progress of Lucy, an attractive, spoilt, middle-class 27-year-old just beginning to get a toehold on success as a children’s TV presenter. Her life collapses around her, however, after she is discovered smoking heroin in her dressing room and she is sacked from her job.

She seeks sanctuary with her indulgent, guilt-haunted mother in their comfortable Islington home, who in trying to do her best for her child actually does everything that’s worst, enabling Lucy’s escalating heroin habit while smothering her with an unconditional love which, far from being admirable, is manifestly unhealthy.

In a series of short, sharp scenes we watch Lucy’s decline over several years, as she trades sex for drugs, starts to inject, and winds up first in casualty, then in rehab.

It’s a challenging play, but exceptionally rewarding and illuminating and I especially recommend it to anyone with addiction problems in their family. There is real enlightenment on offer here, as well as tentative hope.' Rating: Five Stars

Charles Spencer - Telegraph
Imprint: Methuen Drama
Paperback,128 pages ISBN: 9781408153314Publication Date:
10 Mar 2011
Size: 198mm x 129mm£11.99

Also by David Eldridge:

Beginning
Under the Blue Sky

Go to author page...

Similar Titles
JP Miller's 1962 film Days of Wine and Roses, adapted brilliantly for the stage by Owen McCafferty.
A funny, touching and at times savage portrait of a family loosing its grip, examining the fate of the revolutionary...
A hard-hitting, claustrophic drama about trying to escape your past.
A sensitive drama about the interplay between illness, addiction and love, from the acclaimed American playwright Cra...
An angry and passionate play chronicling the fallout for communities crushed by the heroin epidemic at the height of...
A stark, bold, powerful and poetic drama looking at the effects on adult life of childhood trauma and the cycles of d...