Peter Ackroyd - Shakespeare: The Biography
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- Book:Shakespeare: The Biography
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- Year:2005
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Acclaim for Peter Ackroyds
Shakespeare
Ackroydnovelist, poet, critic, biographer, historian, omnivorehas been building toward this biography for decades. He knows the 16th century, and he knows the artistic soul. He gives us a Shakespeare rooted in Stratford, energized by London, shaped by theatrical contingencies, but able to transcend all of them through his innate perception and detachment.
The Miami Herald
Extremely thorough and well-researched. [Ackroyd] gives humanity to the portrait, in a somewhat Dickensian fashion.
The Telegraph
The narrative flows so well that at times this biography reads as smoothly as a good work of historical fiction. What makes Shakespeare: The Biography such an entertaining and enlightening read is the ability of Ackroyd to make his subjects and their world live and breathe on the page. The Denver Post
Admirable. [Ackroyd] is (as the biographer of London) at his most vivid describing the feel of 16th-century metropolitan life.The New Statesman
Fascinating doesnt even begin to describe it. Ackroyd takes all the information we have on Shakespeare and puts it into new perspective. It unfurls like fast-moving fiction, is swaddled in atmosphere and is always engaging. The Plain Dealer
A strikingly good read. Ackroyd succeeds perhaps better than any other recent biographer in piecing together the scattered pieces of Shakespeares life for a general audience.
The San Diego Union Tribune
Immensely enjoyable. Ackroyd provides material for a thousand theses. The Providence Journal
Magisterial [with] a vivid grasp of the material elements of the daily life of long-lost England. The Nation
Fascinating. Rich. A vivid and convincing biography.
The Manchester Evening News
Peter Ackroyd
Shakespeare
Peter Ackroyd is a bestselling writer of both fiction and nonfiction. His most recent books include The Lambs of London and J.M. W. Turner, the second biography in the Ackroyd Brief Lives series. He has also written full-scale biographies of Dickens, Blake, and Thomas More and the novels The Clerkenwell Tales, The Trial of Elizabeth Cree, Milton in America, and The Plato Papers. He has won the Whitbread Award for Biography, the Royal Society of Literature Award under the William Heinemann Bequest (jointly), the Somerset Maugham Award, the South Bank Award for Literature, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and The Guardian fiction prize. He lives in London.
FICTION
The Great Fire of London
The Last Testament of Oscar Wilde
Hawksmoor
Chatterton
First Light
English Music
The House of Doctor Dee
Dan Leno and the Limehouse Golem
Milton in America
The Plato Papers
The Clerkenwell Tales
NONFICTION
Dressing Up: Transvestism and Drag: The History of an Obsession
London: The Biography
Albion: The Origins of the English Imagination
BIOGRAPHY
Ezra Pound and His World
T.S. Eliot
Dickens
Blake
The Life of Thomas More
POETRY
Ouch!
The Diversions of Purley
CRITICISM
Notes for a New Culture
The Collection: Journalism, Reviews, Essays, Short Stories, Lectures
(edited by Thomas Wright)
Authors note
Stratford-Upon-Avon
16 Before I Know My Selfe, Seeke Not to Know Me
17 I Can See a Church by Day-Light
The Queens Men
19 This Way for Me
Lord Stranges Men
The Earl of Pembrokes Men
36 That Hath a Mint of Phrases in His Braine
The Lord Chamberlains Men
39 Lord How Art Thou Changed
54 And to Be Short, What Not, Thats Sweete and Happie
New Place
58 A Loyall, Iust and Vpright Gentleman
The Globe
69 I Must Become a Borrower of the Night
73 My Lord This Is But the Play, Theyre But in Iest
The Kings Men
81 That Strain Agen, It Had a Dying Fall
Black friars
91 To Heare the Story of Your Life
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT
Title page from The Bishops Bible, quarto edition 1569. G 12188. By permission of the British Library
The Elizabethan clown, Richard Tarlton, depicted as part of a decorated initial. Harley 3885 f. 19. By permission of the British Library
One of Nicholas Visschers panoramas of London and the Thames. Guildhall Library, Corporation of London, UK/Bridgeman Art Library
From Robert Greenes autobiographical pamphlet, Groats-worth of Witte, bought with a million of Repentance (1592). The Folger Shakespeare Library
The comedian William Kempe. From his Nine Daies Wonder (printed in 1600) in which he described how he had morris-danced all the way from London to Norwich. Bodleian Library
Rough sketch (1602) of the proposed Shakespeare coat of arms. The Folger Shakespeare Library
The Globe Theatre on Bankside, after an engraving of the time of James I. Bridgeman Art Library/private collection/The Stapleton Collection
Title page to Mischeefes Mysterie or Treasons Master-peece, the Powder Plot. Wood cut by John Vickars. Bridgeman Art Library/private collection
Ben Jonsons Oberon, the Fairy Prince: designs by Inigo Jones (1611). The Courtauld Institute/The Devonshire Collection, Chatsworth. Reproduced by permission of the Duke of Devonshire and the Chatsworth Settlement Trustees
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE INSERTS
Seventeenth-century gloves. V & A images, Victoria and Albert Museum
Hornbook. The Folger Shakespeare Library
The nave of Stratfords Guild Chapel. Maya Vision International
Queen Elizabeth I. National Portrait Gallery, London
Edmund Campion. By permission of the Governors of Stonyhurst College
Lord Strange (Ferdinando Stanley, the fifth Earl of Derby). Oil on canvas, Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger. The Right Hon the Earl of Derby/Bridgeman Art Library
Thought to be Christopher Marlowe. The Master and Fellows of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge
Titus Andronicus (1594). By permission of the Marquess of Bath, Longleat House, Warminster, Wiltshire, Great Britain
Frontispiece to The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd, printed by Augustine Mathewes, 1633 (woodcut). Private collection/Bridgeman Art Library
Dedicatory epistle to The Rape of Lucrece. The Folger Shakespeare Library
Henry Wriothesley, third Earl of Southampton. Nicholas Hilliard. Gouache on vellum. Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, UK/Bridgeman Art Library
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