|
Loading... A Brave Vessel: The True Tale of the Castaways Who Rescued Jamestown and…by Hobson Woodward
Since I work with Hobson Woodward, the author of A Brave Vessel: The True Tale of the Castaways Who Rescued Jamestown and Inspired Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' (Viking, 2009), it certainly wouldn't be fair of me to review it in the same way I would review any other book. But I will say that I have read A Brave Vessel, and enjoyed it greatly. Hobson's done a great job of recreating the Sea Venture voyage and its aftermath, and argues persuasively that William Strachey's narrative of the events was known to Shakespeare and utilized by him in the composition of The Tempest. He puts the notes to good use by adding further details there, and offers an excellent and lengthy bibliography. http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2009/... |
|
The last third of the book Woodward gives a thorough account of the episodes in Shakespeare’s play, The Tempest, that were undoubtedly inspired by the account of his sojourn that Strachey mailed to England in a letter to a woman he hoped would become his literary patron and sponsor the book about his experiences he hoped to publish . These two portions of the story provide a very interesting account, not only of the history of the castaways on Bermuda and how they survived for so long, but also giving us insight into how Shakespeare was accustomed to adapt material from outside sources to create his dramas that have stood the test of time.
A surprising bonus this book provides is the middle portion of the story. Woodward, using many sources written by several of the colonists during that time, gives us an incredible account of life in Jamestown starting just after the winter called “the starving time” until Strachey leaves to return to England. We see how the colony was governed, what daily life was like, the problems with the natives, and the attempts to expand and create other settlements. Although I had a few quibbles with Woodward’s speculations, especially with his describing Strachey’s reaction to Shakespeare’s play (entirely speculative!) I enjoyed this book immensely. It is not an academic report but written for the entertainment of the average reader. It succeeds admirably in what it set out to do. (