Extracted from the best-selling Complete Works of Shakespeare, 5/e by David Bevington, The Necessary Shakespeare offers the most comprehensive scholarly apparatus, with the most often taughtnecessaryof Shakespeare's work, creating a truly concise yet complete anthology. This anthology provides extensive introductions to the plays and poems-offering discussion topics, sources for each play, and the stage history of performances. Readers interested in Shakespeare.
If you want a one volume Shakespeare book that provides plenty of background material, nice discussions of film and criticism, and terrific editing and annotations of 20 odd Shakespeare plays that are the best known and most widely read, this is your ticket. It's a great, great book. I suppose you could quibble about a couple of plays that are left out--I, personally, miss Coriolanus--but there's no better one size fits all Shakespeare book out there.
Just finished reading Hamlet - I've fallen in love with Shakespeare. I read several of his plays many years ago, but being older (and taking a wonderful Shakespeare class), his work means so much more to me now; endlessly fascinating characters; questions we'll never quite know the answers to (was Hamlet's madness feigned or real? did Ophelia commit suicide?) So many themes woven into the play - it's just as relevant today as it was over 400 years ago. Next is Othello....
Five stars for Shakespeare, a few less for David Bevington. I really enjoyed reading the plays we studied in my LIT class this term. It was the first time I had read Antony and Cleopatra. Bevington's essays introducing the texts were insightful but often represented his personal views instead of providing a more general critical overview of the play. Most of the time I found myself agreeing with Bevington's scholarship, but for a text book the intros should be more broad.
I have read: The Taming of the Shrew A Midsummer Night's Dream Much Ado About Nothing As You Like It Twelfth Night The First Part of King Henry the Fourth Romeo and Juliet Julius Caesar Hamlet, Prince of Denmark Othello, the Moor of Venice King Lear The Winter's Tale The Tempest Sonnets
I had to get this book for my Shakespeare class in college. And no, I don't think I used Cliffnotes...at least not for all of them ;) My favorite stories are (not in order)Macbeth, Romeo & Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream,& Hamlet (I did an essay on him, where Ia ctually made the point that he was just a really misunderstood guy ;)
Bevington's edition is not worth your time. While it has a decent collection of plays, the introductions are rather pointless. The Arden series is the one to go with, even though it might cost you more money.
If you like Shakespeare (and I do), you'll probably enjoy this though there is really nothing new here. The introductions are nothing special and just cover material I already knew. It's a nice volume but if, like us, you already have a volume of Shakespeare, you won't need this.
The Tempest, Henry IV, First Henry V, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Taming of the Shrew, Hamlet, MacBeth,King Lear, and several sonnets. Seems like I'm leaving one or two out, but these for sure are what we covered in my WBU Shakespeare course. Great editing. Enjoyable compilation.
Romeo and Juliet A Midsummer Night's Dream Much Ado About Nothing The Taming of the Shrew The Tempest The Merchant of Venice Hamlet Othello King Lear Richard III Henry IV Henry V
Each play has an introduction to give you some historical context. Unfamiliar words, and words whose meanings have changed, are explained on the page where it appears in the play.