MICHAL BONCZA recommends a minimalist installation that prompts intriguing connotations
Eros
The White Bear, Kennington
AS EVER, the London fringe is awash with new plays, with most under-resourced and some derivative.
But many are packed with creative energy and a passion for topical issues and one such is Kevin Mandry’s intense and thought-provoking three-hander Eros. Unlike now, when online imagery and thinking shapes our lives, the play is set in the mid-90s when the internet, in its infancy, was only a shadow of what is to come.
While it may look at first glance like a simple “Me Too’ story, it goes beyond the casual abuse of women to explore the terrible impact on men who seek only perfection and gratification to the detriment of any real and loving relationships.
PETER MASON welcomes collected writings from Britain’s first black female publisher that focus on the place of black writers in literature
ANNA FISHER explores what would it mean for women’s equality and public safety if Britain embraces full commercialisation of the sex trade
KEN COCKBURN relishes the memoir of a translator, but wonders whether the autobiography underlying the impulse would make a better book
The Bard commutes to work for the first time in 45 years


