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If you haven’t read it (or seen a production that left you scratching your head), the premise is famously simple: two men, Vladimir and Estragon, wait by a lone tree for a mysterious man named Godot. He never shows up. They talk, they argue, they eat a carrot, they consider hanging themselves, and then they wait some more.

We’ve all been there: staring at a phone that won’t ring, sitting in a doctor’s waiting room with outdated magazines, or stuck in a career rut that feels like a loop. But nobody has ever made "the wait" quite as famous—or as hauntingly funny—as Samuel Beckett did in his 1953 masterpiece, .

At its core, the play is a masterclass in the . It captures that very human feeling that life is a series of repetitive actions with no clear punchline. "Waiting for Godot" by Samuel Beckett - Dave's Book Blog

Waiting For Godot -

If you haven’t read it (or seen a production that left you scratching your head), the premise is famously simple: two men, Vladimir and Estragon, wait by a lone tree for a mysterious man named Godot. He never shows up. They talk, they argue, they eat a carrot, they consider hanging themselves, and then they wait some more.

We’ve all been there: staring at a phone that won’t ring, sitting in a doctor’s waiting room with outdated magazines, or stuck in a career rut that feels like a loop. But nobody has ever made "the wait" quite as famous—or as hauntingly funny—as Samuel Beckett did in his 1953 masterpiece, . Waiting for Godot

At its core, the play is a masterclass in the . It captures that very human feeling that life is a series of repetitive actions with no clear punchline. "Waiting for Godot" by Samuel Beckett - Dave's Book Blog If you haven’t read it (or seen a