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Description
Product details
| Published | Oct 15 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 464 |
| ISBN | 9781350543270 |
| Imprint | The Arden Shakespeare |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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The book offers an entirely comprehensive coverage of WS' output and the author's scholarly credentials and experience make it look as though he is ideally positioned to write this book. There seems to be a deliberate and consistent effort in the proposal (and, in reality, in the sample chapters) to ensure that the book is accessible, chatty, fun and one which wouldn't gather dust. Emphatically not an encyclopedia, it takes each of the Bard's plays and holds them under a microscope. I enjoyed the sample chapters a lot.
I think this is the sort of book that schools would buy so that every library, English classroom and Drama office had one. Additionally, it would be a great addition to theatre bookshops and a wonderful gift. Big international appeal also with a pleasing eye (based on the chapters available) on non-Western productions.Matthew Nichols, Manchester Grammar School, UK
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I can imagine this book being read, enjoyed, and used by individual students who discover a passion for Shakespeare or who are curious about the plays and why they are so popular. I can also see particular sections being useful for assigned readings in high school or college-level introductions to particular plays.
Josephine Lee, University of Minnesota, USA
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This is an extraordinarily ambitious project making for a heavyweight tome (however lighthearted the tone). The author manages to convey a good deal of factual information among areas of open-ended discussion. Referencing is very light touch – in general a paragraph at the end of a chapter to flag up where further information can be found about specific topics. As a contribution to Shakespeare textbooks, it's undoubtedly the only work of this kind to address this quantity of material in a determinedly non-academic fashion. The two introductory chapters effectively signal ways of reading the book and introduce the open-endedness of reading Shakespeare – one of the author's real strengths is his insistence on 'ambiguity … and plurality'.
Pamela Bickley, formerly Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
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The writing is charismatic and an broad introduction to plays written accessibly might well appeal to a range of readers. The proposal is thorough (it includes all plays, including those of contested authorship) and has a clear internal structure followed in each chapter. Rather than presenting new research per se (though there are some unique perspectives offered), it is intended to offer a way into the plays for people new to Shakespeare.
Will Shüler, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK

























