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Samuel Schoenbaum (1927–1996)

Author of Shakespeare's Lives

33+ Works 991 Members 8 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the names: S. Schoenbaum, Samuel Schoenbaum

Image credit: from wikipedia

Works by Samuel Schoenbaum

Shakespeare's Lives (1970) 374 copies, 7 reviews
A New Companion to Shakespeare Studies (1971) — Editor — 58 copies
Shakespeare and Others (1985) 7 copies

Associated Works

Coriolanus (1623) — Criticism, some editions — 3,169 copies, 56 reviews
2 Plays: Henry VIII; King John (1986) — Editor, some editions — 115 copies, 1 review
The bloody banquet 1639. [Prepared by Samuel Schoenbaum] (2009) — Editor, some editions — 10 copies
Shakespeare's styles : essays in honour of Kenneth Muir (1980) — Contributor — 8 copies
Studies in the English Renaissance drama — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
Since nobody else has attempted a review of this culmination of Samuel Schoenbaum's life work, I'll submit a few comments.
Suffice it to say that SS has written an exhaustive and sometimes exhausting survey and analysis of the whole gamut of attempts to present an accurate biography of Shakespeare. SS meticulously demolishes myths and acknowledges new genuine discoveries. He lays out the stories of the forgers, William-Henry Ireland and John Payne Collier. He gives careful, balanced attention show more to all the major antiquarians and scholars, usually with his own devastating comments. (A typical example when commenting on the writing of Edgar I Fripp, "--- his book breaks down into bits and pieces - 163 chapters in all. It is rather as though a gifted miniaturist found himself confronted with the task of decorating the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.") I could almost apply his description of E. K. Chambers's writing to himself: "His prose style exquisitely matches his needs: at its best concise, disdaining floridity, without eloquence but enlivened by occasional flashes of caustic wit..."
He ends by recalling the three great scholars: Edmond Malone in the 18th century, James Halliwell-Phillipps in the 19th, and E.K. Chambers in the early 20th, while noting that none of them wrote a narrative life. He ends, "Meanwhile, Shakespeare endures."
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½
Yes, believe it or not, I actually finished this book. Very interesting, but very dense. Rewards slow reading if you have the patience for it.
Yes, believe it or not, I actually finished this book. Very interesting, but very dense. Rewards slow reading if you have the patience for it.
This is an analysis of many biographies and biographical articles written aboy William Shakespeare. Some of the biographies are truthful, others fiction.

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Associated Authors

Stanley J. Kahrl Editor, Contributor
Beatrice Corrigan Contributor
John S. Weld Contributor
Cyrus Hoy Contributor
Samuel Schuman editorial assistant, Editor
Ann Haaker Contributor
Alan H. Nelson Contributor
Daniel C. Boughner Contributor
William Ingram Contributor
Marvin T. Herrick Contributor
D. F. Rowan Contributor
W A Armstrong advisory editor
R. W. Ingram Contributor
Marion Trousdale Contributor
alan dessen Contributor
Stephen Orgel Contributor
T. J. King Contributor
R.M. Barlow Asst. editor
A. C. Cawley Contributor
Stuart Omans Contributor
D. S. Bland Contributor
Juliet Gowan Contributor
W. R. Gair Contributor
George Shand Contributor
Nicholas Dewey Contributor
George W. Ray Contributor
Brownell Salomon Contributor
R. W. Van Fossen Contributor
Johan Gerritsen Contributor
William G. Clubb Contributor
Joel H. Kaplan Contributor
Akihiro Yamada Contributor
John Loftis Contributor
Kathleen Williams Contributor
Robert A. Potter Contributor
John M. Steadman Contributor
Martin Stevens Contributor
Richard Hosley Contributor
J. S. Dean, Jr Contributor

Statistics

Works
33
Also by
9
Members
991
Popularity
#25,990
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
8
ISBNs
40
Languages
5
Favorited
1

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