*Starred Review* The year 1599 was an extraordinary one for England. The great poet Edmund Spenser came in a huff from Ireland, urging that the natives there be put down (starvation was the means he urged). The Earl of Essex led an army across the Irish Sea to pacify the rebels; he spent thousands, knighted hundreds, and achieved a flimsy truce. The queen's censors waxed vigilant; the second printing of a best-selling history, mildly critical of royalty, became kindling for a bonfire of satires suggesting that Elizabeth, 66, was declining and speculating on who, or what, would succeed her. Arguably most important, the East India Company was formed, betokening the emergence of capitalism just as Essex's Irish fiasco put paid to the age of chivalry. Meanwhile, the Chamberlain's Men erected a new theater, the Globe, with the hastily disassembled materials of their old one. They presented
Henry V, Julius Caesar, and
As You Like It by their resident dramatist, who also wrote the first version of
Hamlet. Those four plays marked changes in Shakespeare's style, intent, and vision that Shapiro eloquently, convincingly links to England's contemporary great events. This book is a masterpiece, simply a masterpiece.
Ray OlsonCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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“Very distinguished...captivating...Shapiro succeeds where others have fallen short.” (William E. Cain, Boston Globe )
“Only an extraordinary scholar could illuminate Shakespeare’s singular genius by demonstrating how much his work owes to Elizabethan cultureandsociety.” (Alexandra Alter, Chicago Tribune )
“James Shapiro throws an unusually searching light across Shakespeare’s creative genius and makes him come truly alive.” (The Economist )
“Superb—the product of marathon scholarship, inspired insight, narrative flair, astute surmise and searching intelligence.” (Peter Kemp, Sunday Times (London) )
“an unforgettable illumination of a crucial moment in the life of our greatest writer.” (Robert McCrum, The Observer )
“[This] is one of the few genuinely original biographies of Shakespeare.” (Jonathan Bate, Sunday Telegraph )
“a brilliantly readable and revealing narrative.” (Nicholas Hytner, The Guardian )
“For Irish readers...by far the best account yet written of the relationship between this island and Shakespeare’s work.” (Fintan O'Toole, Irish Times )
“If Will in the World is essentially an extremely good historical novel, [YLOWS] is history itself” (Jeremy Treglown, Financial Times )
“Excellent book....superbly illuminating....Shapiro deserves whoops of applause.” (Sam Leith, The Spectator )
“Shapiro gives us a Shakespeare who chronicles his age, in a biographical form that speaks clearly to our own.” (Francis Wilson, Saturday Telegraph )
“Quite brilliant….It gives a whole large picture of his life, times, and achievement. Wonderful.” (Andrew Motion, Poet Laureate (England) )
“As a yarn, this is up there with The Da Vinci Code but in 1599 it’s all true!” (Sir Ian McKellen )
“Mr. Shapiro has given us by his encyclopedic scholarship and lucid narrative a hitherto unknown Shakespeare.” (Jacques Barzun, author of From Dawn to Decadence )
“[P]assionately written study, the product of deep scholarship and acute critical thought... fascinating.” (Stanley Wells, Editor of The Oxford Shakespeare )
“a stunning exhibition of scholarly intelligence by an academic deeply committed to arriving at the truth.” (Christopher Rush, Sunday Herald, Halifax )
“deliciously vivid....Shapiro weaves a tantalising narrative.” (David Lister, The Independent )
“Shapiro’s scrupulous scholarship has given us a Shakespeare both for his time and our own.” (David Scott Kastan, General Editor, The Arden Shakespeare )
“An intriguing addition to Shakespeare studies...open-minded readers will be stimulated and enriched by Shapiro’s contextual approach.” (Kirkus Reviews (starred review) )
“This book is a masterpiece, simply a masterpiece.” (Booklist (starred review) )