Everyday Maps for Everyday Use
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:12th Apr '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

A stunning new play about fantasy, sexuality and the blurry lines between reality and desire.
A stunning new play about fantasy and sexuality, and about the blurry and indistinct lines between reality and desire
“I don’t think we’ll get to Mars… not really…not normal people. Scientists might… it’ll end up a scientific outpost like Antarctica… but it won’t be for people like you and me.”
Maggie has found a warm patch of ground on Horsell Common. She believes something is buried in the dirt. This is the site of the Martian invasion in H G Wells' The War of the Worlds and she sneaks out of the house in the dead of night and dances on the warm spot. Here she meets Behrooz, an amateur astronomer who spends his nights mapping the surface of Mars. Cartographer John is remapping the streets of Woking. He's about to become a father and is terrified by the thought. He finds an ally in Corinne, Maggie's mother - a woman struggling to keep her sex life separate and secret from her daughter. Kiph, who everyone thinks is gay, is madly in love with Maggie, his best-friend. He attends a book signing to meet his hero, Richard Bleakman - star of cult 80s sci-fi show John Carter of Mars. Richard has problems of his own. A stunning new play about fantasy and sexuality, and about the blurry and indistinct linesbetween reality and desire.
""a crisply written piece" - The Arts Desk "tightly-constructed, familiar and truthful - when it hits it really hits" - A Younger Theatre"
ISBN: 9781849434416
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 95g
88 pages