Shakespeare: The World as Stage

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Shakespeare: The World as Stage
AuthorBill Bryson
LanguageEnglish
SeriesEminent Lives
GenreNon-fiction, Biography
PublisherHarperCollins
Publication date
2007
Media typePrint (hardcover, paperback), Audiobook
Pages199 pp
ISBN978-0-06-074022-1
OCLC136782567
822.3/3 B 22
LC ClassPR2895 .B79 2007

Shakespeare: The World as Stage is a biography of William Shakespeare by author Bill Bryson. The 199-page book is part of Harper Collins' series of biographies, "Eminent Lives". The focus of the book is to state what little is known conclusively about Shakespeare, and how this information is known, with some discussion of disproved theories, myths, and that which is believed by the public but not provable. It also explores the political, social, cultural and economic background to Shakespeare's work.

The book is also available as an unabridged audiobook, published by Harper Audio and read by the author.

Content

Bryson discusses a wide range of matters relating to Shakespeare, his time and work, for example the Chandos portrait and the existence (or not) of Anne Whateley.

He also explores Shakespeare's 'lost years'.

In the work he cites scholars such as Stephen Greenblatt, Frank Kermode, Edmond Malone, Samuel Schoenbaum, Caroline Spurgeon and Charles William Wallace.

Critical reception

Nancy Dalva wrote in the New York Observer: "Right off, the author’s established his blithe and sunny tone: If a trio of witches were cooking up this book in a cauldron, there’d be a pinch of P.G. Wodehouse, a soupçon of Sir Osbert Lancaster and a cup of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. One can be firm of purpose and blithe at the same time, it turns out; one can write a seriously entertaining book."[1]

References