With my background in Classics, I’m used to knowing little and less about the authors I study, only the scant mentions given by themselves and contemporaries. If the life of Shakespeare fits on a side of A4 paper, the lives of Virgil or Ovid would fit on a postcard.
Therefore, though only having a GCSE in English Lit and having only read one other biography of Shakespeare (Bill Bryson) and a single YouTube video on the authorship, this book was my (re-)introduction to the authorship controversy.
As a summary of the debate as it stood at the time of publication, it serves its purpose giving the cases for (and against) the man from Stratford, Bacon, Oxford, Marlowe and others.
One LARGE warning: some of Shakespeare’s sonnets were undoubtedly addressed to a man “the Fair Youth” and the author’s consideration of whether each candidate would have written such poets is awkward, both in trying to figure out what evidence we have of each candidate’s sexuality as well as the idea that the relationship with the Fair Youth must be pederasty, a conflation which should not be been considered even in 1996.