The Play's The Thing: Volume two

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism
Cover of the book The Play's The Thing: Volume two by Dennis Abrams, Pentian
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Dennis Abrams ISBN: 9781635031003
Publisher: Pentian Publication: January 25, 2016
Imprint: Pentian Language: English
Author: Dennis Abrams
ISBN: 9781635031003
Publisher: Pentian
Publication: January 25, 2016
Imprint: Pentian
Language: English

The Play"s The Thing: The Plays of William Shakespeare is aimed at a YA (young adult) audience as an introduction to the greatest plays ever written. Direct and personal and decidedly non-academic, each play gets its own essay, giving the reader an overview of the play with an emphasis on the relevance that the play has to the reader"s own life and concerns. As I wrote in the introduction, "The goal of this guide, then, is to turn Shakespeare from somebody you have to read into somebody that you want to read." A young man struggles with his father's unexpected death. A young couple pledges their love to each other despite their families' angry disapproval. A young man rebels against his father while at the same time craving his approval. A father and his family roam across what appears to be a post-apocalyptic dystopian landscape. A Roman general kills the sons of his enemy and serves them to her baked in a pie. Two young couples escape into a forest where magic rules and nothing is quite what it seems. A group of young men decide to give up on women and dating in order to devote themselves to their studies, until a group of beautiful young women changes their minds. The latest YA novels? While they certainly sound like they can be, they're not. They're just one way of looking at some of the plays of William Shakespeare (to be precise, Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet, Henry IV Parts I & 2, King Lear, Love's Labour's Lost) that shows that they're not just old-school classic plays – they're old-school classic plays that tell stories that are relevant to my life, to your lives, and to the way we all live today. These are stories of love. Of families. Of fathers and sons. Of the rise and fall of kings. Of what it's like to grow old. Of what it's like to love someone so much it hurts. Of treachery and revenge. Of ambition. Of jealousy. Of forgiveness. Of murder. Almost every human experience you can think of is brought to life in these plays. Which is why, for more than 400 years, they have been seen as the central glory of Western literature. And that's also why the plays of William Shakespeare are, on a daily basis, performed on stages around the world. The stories he told, the characters he created, are universal. Audiences in China, in Ghana, in India, in Brazil, in every part of the world, can appreciate and love Shakespeare as much as the British and Americans.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The Play"s The Thing: The Plays of William Shakespeare is aimed at a YA (young adult) audience as an introduction to the greatest plays ever written. Direct and personal and decidedly non-academic, each play gets its own essay, giving the reader an overview of the play with an emphasis on the relevance that the play has to the reader"s own life and concerns. As I wrote in the introduction, "The goal of this guide, then, is to turn Shakespeare from somebody you have to read into somebody that you want to read." A young man struggles with his father's unexpected death. A young couple pledges their love to each other despite their families' angry disapproval. A young man rebels against his father while at the same time craving his approval. A father and his family roam across what appears to be a post-apocalyptic dystopian landscape. A Roman general kills the sons of his enemy and serves them to her baked in a pie. Two young couples escape into a forest where magic rules and nothing is quite what it seems. A group of young men decide to give up on women and dating in order to devote themselves to their studies, until a group of beautiful young women changes their minds. The latest YA novels? While they certainly sound like they can be, they're not. They're just one way of looking at some of the plays of William Shakespeare (to be precise, Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet, Henry IV Parts I & 2, King Lear, Love's Labour's Lost) that shows that they're not just old-school classic plays – they're old-school classic plays that tell stories that are relevant to my life, to your lives, and to the way we all live today. These are stories of love. Of families. Of fathers and sons. Of the rise and fall of kings. Of what it's like to grow old. Of what it's like to love someone so much it hurts. Of treachery and revenge. Of ambition. Of jealousy. Of forgiveness. Of murder. Almost every human experience you can think of is brought to life in these plays. Which is why, for more than 400 years, they have been seen as the central glory of Western literature. And that's also why the plays of William Shakespeare are, on a daily basis, performed on stages around the world. The stories he told, the characters he created, are universal. Audiences in China, in Ghana, in India, in Brazil, in every part of the world, can appreciate and love Shakespeare as much as the British and Americans.

More books from Literary Theory & Criticism

Cover of the book Deleuze, The Dark Precursor by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Women in Love Lesson Plans by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Posthumous America by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Study Guide for Book Clubs: My Brilliant Friend by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Paul et Virginie de Bernardin de Saint-Pierre by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book In The Beginning... From Egypt to Goshen - Expanded Edition by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Moving Modernisms by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book The Correspondence of Sarah Helen Whitman and Julia Deane Freeman by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Les Employés by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Physiologie de l'Anglais à Paris by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Yo no vengo a decir un discurso by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Tagebücher in Einzelheften. Heft 3 by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book On ne naît pas femme : on le devient by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Tragedias I by Dennis Abrams
Cover of the book Ungaretti by Dennis Abrams
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy