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Loading... Who Killed William Shakespeare?: The Murderer, the Motive, the Meansby Simon Andrew Stirling
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is basically a 250 page exercise in confirmation bias as the author desperately offers up idea after idea to provide credence to a faintly ludicrous central hypothesis that Shakespeare was murdered by fellow poet and playwright Ben Johnson. Having said that the book is clearly heavily researched and offered up some new angles and additions to the mythology surrounding the Bard that I hadn’t read before. There’s also fun to be had enjoying seeing just how many ways tenuous links, circumstantial coincidences, and family connections can be twisted to prove a point. ( ) no reviews | add a review
William Shakespeare lived in violent times; his death passed without comment. By the time he was adopted as the national poet of England the details of his life had been concealed. He had become an invisible man, the humble Warwickshire lad who entertained royalty and then faded into obscurity. But his story has been carefully manipulated. In reality, he was a dissident whose works were highly critical of the regimes of Elizabeth I and James I. Who Killed William Shakespeare? examines the means, motive and the opportunity that led to his murder, and explains why Will Shakespeare had to be 'stopped'. From forensic analysis of his death mask to the hunt for his missing skull, the circumstances of Shakespeare's death are reconstructed and his life reconsidered in the light of fresh discoveries. What emerges is a portrait of a genius who spoke his mind and was silenced by his greatest literary rival. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)822.33Literature English & Old English literatures English drama Elizabethan 1558-1625 Shakespeare, William 1564–1616LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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