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Shakespeare: For All Time (2002)

by Stanley Wells

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1523181,106 (4.4)2
Looks at the life, career, works, and influence of William Shakespeare.
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Just great. Stanley Wells can do no wrong, and this is yet another example. The book takes a no-nonsense approach to Shakespeare, laying out the basic facts we know about him and the theatre of his time, and then devoting much of the book to Shakespeare's afterlife. Wells regales us with stories of the actors, directors, writers, naysayers, fans, and idolaters who kept Shakespeare's name in the common mind for four hundred years. By the nature of this book, it's inevitably a surface-level tour. The book has a lengthy bibliography, as this is not attempting to be comprehensive so much as all-encompassing.

I'd say this is a worthy read for any Shakespeare fan, because it covers a different tract of the area of scholarship. This book is much more about how the public and the fans grappled with Shakespeare's works, rather than how academics did so, and for this it is highly worth reading. ( )
  therebelprince | Apr 21, 2024 |
Stanley Wells has distilled nearly half a century's experience as one of the most respected critics and editors of Shakespeare to produce Shakespeare: For All Time, a definitive account of Shakespeare life, writing and afterlife. The result is a brilliant survey of the world's most famous writer, of whom Ben Jonson claimed "He was not of an age, but for all time," that stretches from his first mention in 1564 in the parish register of Stratford-upon-Avon church, to "Shakespeare's emergence as a truly global writer, aided by the increasing use of English as an international language," watched and read by millions of people throughout the world.

The strength of Wells' book is that it encompasses Shakespearean biography, criticism and history. The early chapters deal with Shakespeare's days in Stratford, his move to London and immersion in the theatrical world, and a vivid recreation of the stage and court of the day. There are short, acute accounts of nearly all the plays, as well as Wells' broader claims that Shakespeare was "a religious writer: not a proponent of any particular religion, but a writer who is aware, and makes his spectators aware, of the mystery of things, of mankind's impulse to seek, however unavailingly, for an understanding of how we came to be on earth". However, Wells also manages to survey the growth of Shakespeare's legend throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, thanks to the dedication of actors, critics and editors such as David Garrick and Samuel Johnson, through to his current ascendancy across the globe in the mass markets of publishing and the media.

There can be no better book on Shakespeare for the general reader than Wells' Shakespeare. It is learned, clear and passionately committed to Shakespeare, who as far as Wells is concerned, "is in the water supply, and is likely to remain there until the pipes run dry." --Jerry Brotton

David Bevington and Phyllis Fay Horton, University of Chicago
It is learned, wise, beautifully written, eminently readable... a wonderful tribute to Shakespeare by a scholar who has never lost contact with the stage...
1 vote antimuzak | Nov 27, 2005 |
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Looks at the life, career, works, and influence of William Shakespeare.

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