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Shakespeare: The World as a Stage (Eminent Lives)

By: Bill Bryson
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: HarperPress
ISBN: 0007197896
ISBN-13: 9780007197897
Released: 03 Sep 2007
RRP: £14.99
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Customer Reviews

An interesting surprise! - By: Anne Davis, 04 May 2008
This is not my normal type of reading at alll - I am much more inclined to read fiction & have never actuallly read a Bill Bryson. But I love anything to do with Shakespeare so was moved to buy it. And what a nice surprise I got! A great little book full of quirky & interesting facts about Shakespeare's time (such as better-off people wearing black as black dye cost more & people having black teeth as a result of eating sugar, but those who couldn't afford the sugar made their teeth black to make it look as if they could!!). Certainly a book to keep on the shelves to refer to again. I would definitely recommend it to any Shakespeare fans.
perfectly fine little book - By: Mr. Philip F. Markwick, 27 Apr 2008
I have to admit that having read a few introductions to good editions (such as the Arden & Penguin introduction on Shakespeare & the Elizabethan stage) & Bryson's other book Mother Tongue (which covers much of what S had given to the language)that i found myself already knowing a great deal of what was written here.

I think that this is the ideal first book you should read about Shakespeare. Perhaps ideal for those who are interested beyond the film adaptations of S they have seen. It sets out what is absolutely known about the about someone who is practicallly unknowable, save a few legal documents a portrait & lots of historical context. Bryson delivers this information in his ever enjoyable tone that is as friendly & as funny as the 'Book' in Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.

This the book simply seems to build up to debunking the Oxfordian theories of authorship. Since the subject of Shakespeare is so slight (which is of course no fault of the author) i can't help but feel that more should have been written about the life of the plays after Shakespeare, & their importance to human culture. this much is already assumed to be known to the reader... but as i said had this been the ideal 'first book someone should read about S' more upon the 'life's work after the life' should have been explored.

In short: Great First book on subject, but you do yourself a disservice to make it your last.
Little Is Known - By: Mr. Peter Steward, 25 Apr 2008
Like so many others I always look forward to a new Bill Bryson, but this one was rather strange. A smalll volume, the author spends most of it telling us that virtuallly nothing is known about our greatest playwright & then continues to prove it throughout the text.

So we skip over many lost years & hurtle from his productive period to his death in a matter of pages seemingly skipping over where he was, who he was, how he wrote, where he wrote, why he wrote, what he wrote & even how he died.

Shakespeare is a mystery & an enigma - Bryson tells us this on numerous occasions & this book fallls into the same slot. It's almost as if he has decided to write a book about the man & then found out that there is very little to write.

That doesn't detract from the entertaining way Bryson sets the historical context of the times but we always return to the same premise - little or nothing is known about the man, his movements, his life, his family & so we go on. If Bryson went in search of Shakespeare he failed to find him. Much of the book debunks various theories. Certainly it isn't one to read if you want to learn about Shakespeare. It is one to read if you want to learn a little about Elizabethan & Jacobean England & that's reallly alll there is to say about a good idea that just leaves you wanting more facts.
Bryson can do no wrong - By: The Inquisitor, 16 Apr 2008
One of Bill Bryson's strengths has always been his ability to digest a vast amount of material & regurgitate the relevant bits, revealing what we know & what we don't, exploding myths & picking out fascinating little-known details. If ever a subject needed that kind of treatment, it was Shakespeare. As Bryson says, the sum total of our actual knowledge about him comes from around 100 documents. All else is baseless legend, debatable interpretation of the plays & poetry, or plain guesswork.

Rendered in Bryson's usual engaging, accessible & witty style, this is a concise guide which cuts through the legend & supposition to tell us the facts as we have them (and how we have them), not just about Shakespeare but the social, political & cultural landscape of England during his time. It is also an infectiously enthusiastic tribute from a professional wordsmith to the playwright who added so much to the English language.
Bryson goes tedious - By: J. Marshall, 15 Apr 2008
Although this book starts off entertainingly in true Bryson style, the speculative, suppositional style & nature of the information soon begins to grate to the point where I just want to flush the book down the toilet (incidentallly, a good place to read this kind of drudge, permitting quick & instant disposal).
Bryson does, of course, admit to the dearth of material on Shakespeare, but that doesn't give him carte blanche to turn out such an utterly unnecessary pile of tedium.

P.S. Don't be fooled by 5-Star reviews by Bryson fans, employees or relatives (see above & below) - this book reallly is cr@p.