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Friendly Shakespeare: A Thoroughly Painless Guide to the Best of the Bard
Friendly Shakespeare: A Thoroughly Painless Guide to the Best of the Bard | Norrie Epstein
2 posts | 1 read | 15 to read
What's so friendly about William Shakespeare? Haven't we all spent dutiful hours trying to make ourselves enjoy reading the Bard - with mixed results? The Friendly Shakespeare will change all that - it's a book that will delight anyone who ever shuddered at a soliloquy or nodded off the moment an actor said "doth." It's crammed full of solid but never simplistic information; it's intelligent without being overly intellectual, but with the depth to satisfy even those for whom reading Shakespeare is already a delight. The Friendly Shakespeare is written for people who think Shakespeare is, to quote Laurence Olivier, "not for the likes of them." It includes the major plays - histories, tragedies, comedies, and problem plays - but in between you'll find the real plot of Hamlet; raging controversies - like just who was Shakespeare - and was he actually Queen Elizabeth I? And who was the Dark Lady, anyway?; a look at Shakespeare on film - and a complete filmography; "the most insipid, ridiculous play I ever saw" (Samuel Pepys), and other quotes from Shakespeare haters (like Mark Twain and George Bernard Shaw); Shakespeare's ambiguous sexuality - or, was the Bard gay?; a half-dozen ways to say "Scram!" in Elizabethan English, and a glossary of Shakespearean invective; a look at the Elizabethan stage; practical advice from actors on how to read Shakespeare aloud and curious Shakespeareana about the numerous cranks and eccentrics drawn to Shakespeare throughout the ages. Designed to make reading Shakespeare a pleasure, every page of The Friendly Shakespeare is complemented by illustrations, photographs, and sidebars. With infectious enthusiasm and breezy erudition, Norrie Epstein has written acompulsively readable, slightly irreverent book that - at last! - makes Shakespeare not only accessible, but irresistible.
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Sace
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I flaked out on the #ShakespeareReadAlong but I'm determined to be better. So I'm cracking this open and doing a little pre reading for Love's Labour Lost.

batsy Lol that looks like a friendly Will! 😆 4y
Sace @batsy Yeah... To me it's a kinda creepy Will though. So far I'm liking the book. The author has already addressed some of my hangups about The Bard. 😂 4y
65 likes2 comments
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MrBook
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This book provides a bevy of information about the peerless Bard, generally well known and the minutiaed miscellaneous. The plays, the Sonnets, the time period, theater in general, modern manifestations, festivals, etc etc, all come to be discussed and explained. I've taken a number of university Shakespeare courses, & I still learned a lot from this fun read! It's formatted like the "Bathroom Reader" series. #PairWith: Smithwick's Pale Ale, cold.

katedensen Yes, the caricature looks exceedingly friendly. 8y
MrBook @katedfisher 😂👏🏻👍🏻 8y
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