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OverviewWelcome to Know-It-All Shakespeare. Developed by a high-school English teacher, this series puts the richness of the Bard directly in your hand in a friendly and important way. Rather than just including a few footnotes, some sidenotes, and a frustratingly long introduction (that won’t help if you’ve never read the play before), Know-It-All Shakespeare provides a guided tour. The commentaries that are interlaced between the lines of Shakespeare will support you, amuse you, challenge you, and empower you. You’ll get important supports and questions at just the right moments, get historical context in digestible bites, and arrive at the end with a thorough and satisfying understanding along with a deep appreciation of these works that will enrich your life as well as your confidence with Shakespeare. You’ll find space to read these works on your own terms, and you’ll even laugh sometimes. Shakespeare is a gift for everyone. Know-It-All Shakespeare delivers it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Rachel DeTemplePublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Edition: Annotated edition Dimensions: Width: 21.30cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 26.80cm Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9781475858457ISBN 10: 1475858450 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 20 June 2021 Recommended Age: From 18 to 22 years Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction Act I Act II Act III Act IV Act V Afterword About the AuthorReviews"Rachel DeTemple’s unpretentiously engaging tone in her commentary on Hamlet makes her good company for first readers of the world’s most famous play. Her conversational observations —aptly relating the words and actions to the world of students—make their encounter with the play an entertaining journey. -- Ralph Alan Cohen, Gonder Professor of Shakespeare, Mary Baldwin University; Founder Executive Director, American Shakespeare Center At last, a Hamlet for ironic young readers. Rachel DeTemple’s version offers help and encouragement without burying the classic text in footnotes. Near the end, for example, when Hamlet’s mother gives him advice, he mutters, “She well instructs me.” DeTemple observes, “So he finally admits his mother can be right. He must be about to die.” This commentator knows her audience. -- Dr. Janis Lull, Professor Emerita of English at the University of Alaska Fairbanks; editor of Shakespeare’s ""King Richard III"" for the Cambridge University Press series ‘The New Cambridge Shakespeare’" At last, a Hamlet for ironic young readers. Rachel DeTemple's version offers help and encouragement without burying the classic text in footnotes. Near the end, for example, when Hamlet's mother gives him advice, he mutters, She well instructs me. DeTemple observes, So he finally admits his mother can be right. He must be about to die. This commentator knows her audience. -- Dr. Janis Lull, Professor Emerita of English at the University of Alaska Fairbanks; editor of Shakespeare's King Richard III for the Cambridge University Press series 'The New Cambridge Shakespeare' Rachel DeTemple's unpretentiously engaging tone in her commentary on Hamlet makes her good company for first readers of the world's most famous play. Her conversational observations -aptly relating the words and actions to the world of students-make their encounter with the play an entertaining journey. -- Ralph Alan Cohen, Gonder Professor of Shakespeare, Mary Baldwin University; Founder Executive Director, American Shakespeare Center Rachel DeTemple's unpretentiously engaging tone in her commentary on Hamlet makes her good company for first readers of the world's most famous play. Her conversational observations -aptly relating the words and actions to the world of students-make their encounter with the play an entertaining journey. -- Ralph Alan Cohen, Gonder Professor of Shakespeare, Mary Baldwin University; Founder Executive Director, American Shakespeare Center At last, a Hamlet for ironic young readers. Rachel DeTemple's version offers help and encouragement without burying the classic text in footnotes. Near the end, for example, when Hamlet's mother gives him advice, he mutters, She well instructs me. DeTemple observes, So he finally admits his mother can be right. He must be about to die. This commentator knows her audience. -- Dr. Janis Lull, Professor Emerita of English at the University of Alaska Fairbanks; editor of Shakespeare's King Richard III for the Cambridge University Press series 'The New Cambridge Shakespeare' Author InformationRachel DeTemple has been teaching Shakespeare for more than two decades. She has awakened a love of Shakespeare in students from the Deep South (Mississippi) to the Far North (Alaska). She has made Shakespeare fun and approachable for reluctant readers, enthusiastic readers, downright hostile readers, fledgling readers, advanced readers, adult readers, teen readers, and everyone in between. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |