I love Shakespeare's sonnets, and have them in constant rotation among my audio books. But I have largely avoided the plays, aside from assigned reading in highschool over thirty years ago. The play is simply not a literary form that I am drawn to. In any case, I set myself the goal to reread at least one of the tragedies this year, and I bought this volume to hold myself accountable.
Had I stopped after finishing just Hamlet, I would have considered this goal achieved. However once I sank into the plays, with the intellectual perspective and maturity well beyond where I was in highschool, and was able to fully absorb hidden dramatic details, the psychological development of the characters, and the breathtaking inventiveness of language in every other line, I could not put this book down. I read the four plays in sequential order, and then, having grown accustomed to the motion and the music of Shakespeare's dialogue, I reread Hamlet again just to capture any subtleties that I had surely missed the first time around.
I cannot praise this volume enough. The introductory essay by Tony Tanner, which explores each of the plays in depth as well as surfacing themes that tie them all together, is extremely insightful for "self study" of the plays as in the way I approached them. I read each play first before reading the corresponding section of Tanner's introduction, and was encouraged to find that many of the quotations or sequences that were called out as critical passages in the play were also those that drew my attention during my reading. Aside from actually exceeding the goal I set for myself rereading Shakespeare, the most satisfying part of this experience in attempting to connect with a formidable body of literature in my native language was that, in some humble way, I feel I truly understood it.