By Kate Phillips
As a
reader, I always love finding books that appeal to me. As a writer, I am twice
as pleased when the authors also provide masterclasses within their books.
Masterclasses
take place when performance artists and musicians work one-on-one with
students. Writers don’t generally have this option, but I have found some books
to be masterclasses for characters, backstories, plots, settings, voice, and/or
creativity.
The glossy,
heavy stock paper pages are filled with full color photographs, paintings
including the Cobbe portrait of Shakespeare identified in 2009 but not without
controversy, documents, woodcuts, drawings, and sketches not to mention Bryson’s
entrancing prose and entertaining facts like:
Shakespeare produced roughly
one tenth of all the most quotable utterances written or spoken in English
since its inception. (page 151)
He coined—or, to be more
carefully precise, made the first recorded use of—2,035 words, and
interestingly he indulged the practice from the very outset of his career.
(page 148)
and
Although he left nearly a
million words of text, we have just fourteen words in his own hand—his name
signed six times and the words ‘by me’ on his will. (page 24)
That juxtaposition just adds
to the mystery of Shakespeare’s life.
While organized
chronologically, Bill Bryson’s well-researched book is written as a captivating guided tour of Shakespeare’s life, historic London, and the rise and
fall of the theatres. Shakespeare’s companions and competitors all have roles
as well. Who would the man be without his time, place, and contemporaries? Not
to mention his published works. Given all the facts, it’s difficult to imagine
where the English language would be without Shakespeare.
Shakespeare’s plays might
have been lost…had it not been for his close friends and colleagues John
Heminges and Henry Condell, who seven years after Shakespeare’s death, produced
a folio edition of his complete works…Heminges and Condell were the last of the
original Chamberlain’s Men. (page 202)
No one
knows exactly how many First Folios were printed…but all or part of three
hundred survive. (page 211-212) Shakespeare never entirely dropped out of
esteem—as the publication of Second, Third and Fourth Folios clearly
attests—but nor was he reverenced as he is today. After his death, some of his
plays weren’t performed again for a very long time. (page 217)
For any
writer, being recognized and read nearly 400 years after death is astonishing—and
deserving of celebration in such a gorgeous and engaging book.
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