On This Page
Description
An acclaimed author has rewritten twelve of Shakespeare's plays in narrative form, retaining much of the original language, and thus the flavor of the bard's dramas.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
How to introduce kids to Shakespeare—not just to the stories behind the plays but to the richness of his language and the depth of his characters. That’s the challenge that Leon Garfield, a wonderful children’s book writer, undertook to meet in his monumental and delightful Shakespeare Stories. Here are twenty-one of the Bard’s plays, presented in what is not a series of dry retellings, but rather a refashioning of the dramas as stories, in a way that remains true to the essential spirit of the original versions. Garfield has captured all the richness of character, plot, mood, and setting in Shakespeare’s works without resorting to simplification. Indeed, he deliberately retains much of Shakespeare’s language, skillfully show more weaving it into his own prose so that the reader is introduced to the flavor of the verse, as well as to the incidents of plot and the spectacle of the drama. Leon Garfield’s Shakespeare Stories is an essential distillation—a celebration and a reminder of Shakespeare’s genius as a poet and dramatist. show less
These are stunningly well told versions of the plays.
They give not only the story, but a wonderful sense of the theatrical - you read and enjoy a visual sensation as well as the speech of Shakespeare (all the words 'spoken' are taken directly from Shakespeare's scripts).
Romeo and Juliet, for example, sweats in the heat of Verona. There is a fantastic image of wasps fighting! You go directly into the story - and moral considerations are there.
The pictures support the text well- giving yet another dimension to the book.
Forget Lamb!
I've used these stories in the classroom for many years now - partly because young people (11 through to much older!) relate to them -but also because I really enjoy re-reading them.
(There is a whole set of show more Abridged Shakspeare by Garfield too - and wonderful Animations done with Russian animators!) show less
They give not only the story, but a wonderful sense of the theatrical - you read and enjoy a visual sensation as well as the speech of Shakespeare (all the words 'spoken' are taken directly from Shakespeare's scripts).
Romeo and Juliet, for example, sweats in the heat of Verona. There is a fantastic image of wasps fighting! You go directly into the story - and moral considerations are there.
The pictures support the text well- giving yet another dimension to the book.
Forget Lamb!
I've used these stories in the classroom for many years now - partly because young people (11 through to much older!) relate to them -but also because I really enjoy re-reading them.
(There is a whole set of show more Abridged Shakspeare by Garfield too - and wonderful Animations done with Russian animators!) show less
a good book to for anyone who is intimidated by Shakespeare. Good for Middle school to adult.
I like the challenge of trying to figure out what on planet earth he’s trying to say.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Sonlight Books
1,487 works; 25 members
Finish Strong 2015
15 works; 1 member
Shakespeare Retellings for Elementary Kids
100 works; 2 members
Author Information

81+ Works 4,272 Members
Author Leon Garfield was born in Brighton, England on July 14, 1921. When World War II began, he stopped studying art and joined the British Army Medical Corps. While posted in Belgium, he met Vivien Alcock, who would later become his wife as well as a popular children's author. After the war, he worked as a biochemical laboratory technician until show more the 1960's when he became a full-time writer. He wrote more than thirty books for both children and adults and scripted Shakespeare: The Animated Tales for television. His second book, Devil-in-the-Fog won the first ever Guardian Award and was made into a television series. He also won the Carnegie Medal for The God Beneath the Sea, the Whitbread Award for John Diamond, and the Phoenix Award for Smith. His novel Black Jack was made into a full-length feature film and was the joint winner of the International Jury Award at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival. He died in London on June 2, 1996. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
All Editions
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1985
- First words
- Before you hear of the shipwreck, you must know that, inland from its wild sea coast, Illyria was a green and golden land, of thatched cottages, neat as well-combed children, of gracious mansions, and the noble palace of the ... (show all)Duke.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)He held it up on high, and its sightless glare bore witness to the double truth of Fate.
- Disambiguation notice
- Includes 12 stories: Twelfth Night --
King Lear --
The tempest --
The merchant of Venice --
The taming of the shrew --
King Richard the Second --
King Henry IV, part one --
Hamlet --
Romeo and Juliet -... (show all)-
Othello --
A midsummer night's dream --
Macbeth.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 785
- Popularity
- 35,429
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (4.07)
- Languages
- 7 — Catalan, Danish, English, Finnish, Italian, Spanish, Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 19
- UPCs
- 2
- ASINs
- 3































































