Introductions to Shakespeare

Appreciations of the Bard’s greatest works

Wednesday 28 February 2018 09:52 EST
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Four centuries after his death, William Shakespeare remains the most universal of all writers, speaking of and to humanity in all its inexhaustible complexity.

Profound, accessible, timeless, his plays mean so many things to so many people –yet few of us feel the same unqualified warmth for all his different works.

This unique series of short introductions, originally published in The Independent, ranges from tragedy to comedy, history to romance, presenting each play through the personal response of a different writer.

As multi-faceted as the dramas they describe – and accompanied by at-a-glance notes highlighting key points of the works in question – these appreciations are the perfect guide for anyone who ever felt that they didn't quite "get" a particular play – or who felt too intimidated to ask other people what they saw in it.

Simultaneously authoritative and highly subjective, these introductions are the opposite of reverent, academic analyses. They are personal responses, brilliantly captured in words, which remind us that Shakespeare’s greatest gift was his capacity to touch and thrill the human heart.

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