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Stories from Shakespeare

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Familiarity with the stories that Shakespeare is telling in his plays adds enormously to the enjoyment of them on the stage. In this book all the plays from the First Folio – the thirty-six comedies, tragedies, and histories – are retold for the reader of any age who wants a preliminary acquaintance with their plots and characters so that he can step into the wonder of Shakespeare without stumbling. Miss Chute, well-known for her style and scholarship, not only describes the characteristics and plot structure, but by a skillful selection of quotations portrays the atmosphere and underlying themes.Her book is in no sense meant as a substitute for seeing or reading the plays, but is a key to the fullest understanding and appreciation, for, as the author says, the happy reader is the best one. Her book will also have much value for the Shakespearean student, for she prefaces her version of the stories with a long introduction in which she discusses and comments on Shakespeare’s world, the meaning of his genius, the theater of his day, the inherent value of his writing and the way to approach and ready the plays themselves.

352 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1949

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Marchette Gaylord Chute

32 books7 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 50 reviews
7 reviews58 followers
December 18, 2018
A good book for non-native speakers, or perhaps for younger children in England. The language is easy, the four stories the book covers simplified (Merchant of Venice, Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Hamlet). Not much here for an adult or advanced reader, but for the right (young) person, probably quite useful.
Profile Image for Theo Logos.
1,274 reviews288 followers
September 8, 2022
Back in 2016 I began the project of reading through all of Shakespeare’s plays. Over the course of a year I read all 36 plays presented in the First Folio, listening to audiobook productions to replicate as closely as possible the stage experience. I had read a handful before, but for many of them, it was my first reading. However, thanks to this brilliant book, I already had a basic familiarity with even those plays I was reading for the first time.

Stories From Shakespeare is a complete guide to the Bard’s plays. It presents each of the 36 plays from the First Folio divided into sections of Tragedies, Comedies, and Histories. It gives you everything you need for basic comprehension. The author clearly explains each play’s plot, describes its context, its main characters, and includes that play’s most famous quotes. The writing is both lucid and enjoyable.

This book is no substitute for experiencing the Bard’s work first hand. But it is invaluable as an introduction, a way to familiarize yourself with a specific play, or simply a tool to educate yourself on the entire scope of Shakespeare’s impressive catalogue.
Profile Image for Eric Tanafon.
Author 8 books29 followers
November 17, 2017
This book was an eye-opener for me. I've read Shakespeare's plays and seen them performed many times, but I had never researched what is known of Shakespeare himself. Instead, I had a vague collection of ideas about him that have been floating around for decades--for example, not much is known about him, he was a member of the lower class, his father was a butcher, there are serious doubts that he really authored the plays or maybe even existed.

Shakespeare of London refutes all those stories. I found out that Shakespeare's father was an alderman, a well-known public figure in Stratford. Considering that it was over 400 years ago, there's plenty of documentary evidence about the family. And not only is there no doubt that Shakespeare did write the plays, he also acted in them--not at all unusual for Elizabethan times, but not something I'd ever heard before--and entered into ventures with his company to build and own theatres.

Sometimes the author goes off on tangents, as when she spends pages criticizing the Stratford grammar schools that gave town youth a free education, but overall this book is invaluable in understanding Shakespeare's life and times, and a fun read as well.
73 reviews22 followers
September 23, 2012
I first read this 20-25 years ago and have recently reread it.

There are a few niggling annoyances which I notice this time round, but missed the first time. Occasionally Chute's personal views intrude in an unhelpful way e.g. she seems to miss few chances to push her 20th century American capitalist worldview, with any Elizabethan collective practices dismissed as "impractical" and "mediaeval" and examples of free market trade highlighted and praised. She's also on very shaky grounds when she attempts literary criticism, e.g. she dismisses All's Well That Ends Well as an unambiguous failure, ignoring the fact that it was considered a popular part of the canon in the 18th century and her disparaging views of Marlowe's The Jew of Malta and Jonson's work would probably meet with little agreement amongst modern critics. Generally, she's too prone to state her literary views as if they were fact. She also has the sports commentator's habit of being rather too ready to speculate what other people must have been thinking or feeling. And, obviously, as the book was written more than 60 years ago, some of the theories she expounds are dated or have been superseded by modern scholarship.

But this is far less a problem than one might expect. It's an uncannily modern-seeming read.

And she brings Elizabethan and Jacobean England to life with vivacity and attention to detail. Reading it, you feel as if you are walking the mean streets of 17th century Southwark. It's packed full of fascinating anecdotes and facts, but is still a smooth and satisfying read as a linear narrative. And the way that she alternates between life in London and life in provincial Stratford gives a real sense of how these distant communities were linked by relatively good transport links and how many prominent figures had links with both towns. I defy anybody to read this and still believe it unlikely that a lower-middle class boy from the Midlands could have written the Shakespearean canon. Chute ably demonstrates the social fluidity, good secondary education and accessibility of books which makes the orthodox attribution of the plays entirely unremarkable.

My biggest grumble is the lack of references in bibliography (in my 1960s edition, at least).

But a thumping good read and about as good an introduction to Shakespeare's life and times and one could ask for.
Profile Image for P..
1,486 reviews10 followers
May 17, 2010
Long ago Marchette Chute wrote a series of books about literary figures including, and perhaps exclusively as far as I know, Shakespeare, Chaucer, and Ben Jonson. I own and have read all of them. I think my favorite is Shakespeare of London, but Chaucer of England is delightful as well. In many ways they are touchstone books, charming, erudite without the ego and just fun. I found Ben Jonson the least interesting but this may be that I absolutely do not like Ben Jonson. I think it's a tribute to Ms. Chute that I even modestly enjoyed that book. And more to the point, finished it.
Profile Image for Jen.
118 reviews5 followers
April 9, 2018
I always want to read Shakespeare, but I admit I get bogged down.
I bought this book for my kids years ago, but picked it up again when I was purging a bookcase. The author summarizes the plot of each of Shakespeare's major works, gives context, includes famous lines...and it will help the reader choose which play they would like to read in full, and help understand it better. However, this book is enjoyable in itself.
Profile Image for Keith.
853 reviews39 followers
December 17, 2016
Shakespeare of London is an entertaining read. While much is known about the contours of Shakespeare’s life (especially compared his contemporaries), little is known about his motivations, thoughts or feelings.

Chute tell the story of Shakespeare through the stories of Stratford and London, and his environment. This is not an uncommon approach. (The Year of Lear is one example.) But in the reams of scholarship and knowledge about London and Stratford is inevitably a large dose of speculation. However, I don’t think Chute tries to fool the reader – the speculation is acknowledged and the reader can decide to believe it or not.

Chute emphasizes throughout that Shakespeare was an actor -- he regularly performed in plays by himself and others (like Jonson's Sejanus). This is something we (I?) don't think about a lot. According to Chute, this was key to his financial success moreso than the writing. It might have been a factor in his decision to solely focus on writing plays later in his career.

I was also not aware of the relative stablity of Shakespeare's troupe compared to the others of the day. There was a core group -- Shakespeare, Burbage, Condell, Heminges and others -- who worked together almost their entire lives. Chute repeating emphasizes their comity -- perhaps too much. However, it is worth noting that this stability probably gave Shakespeare a bit of license to do better work.

Although I am a frequent reader of Shakespeare, I’ve never been that interested in his life or biography. In fact, I’ve tried to avoid it. However, I picked up this book at a library book sale for a dollar. Although very well researched, the book is not dry or boring. It’s a very entertaining view of life in London that one Williams Shakespeare did and may have seen.
Profile Image for Henry Sturcke.
Author 5 books32 followers
August 15, 2022
Marchette Chute’s aim in writing this “life and times” of William Shakespeare was to limit herself to what can be determined from contemporary sources. I was pleasantly surprised at what she could tease out of the limited available evidence and weave it into an enjoyable, informative narrative.
Along the way, she also portrays the world of Elizabethan theater. I learned much I didn’t know about how plays were created and staged. While Shakespeare towered above other playwrights—which many of them seemed willing to recognize, even if reluctantly—many of them were also skilled craftsmen.
What then set Shakespeare apart? Chute writes that many plays of the previous generation had been comparatively simple affairs that relied on broad humor and spectacle. Their hold on the stage was challenged by a set of university-educated aspiring playwrights, most memorably Christopher Marlowe. The dons at Oxbridge had schooled them in theory, especially concerning the unities they should observe. These principles, as old as Aristotle, had been hardened to dogma. Shakespeare, Chute reports, had little interest in theory.
Chute points to two aspects in which Shakespeare excelled. One was the luxuriant flow of his language, and the other his gift for transcending the types usually portrayed on the stage, replacing them with well-rounded, memorable characters.
Another fact set him apart from rival playwrights: He began as an actor before ever trying his hand at a script and remained one throughout his career. As a result, he knew from ample experience in London theaters, on tour, and in royal palaces what worked in front of an audience. In addition, he was a member of London’s leading troop for most of his career. This meant that as he wrote, he knew the actors who would bring his characters to life. And unlike other playwrights, whose work was done once a theater company accepted the script and paid for it, he remained involved in every step of preparing each production.
His career path set him apart from other playwrights in another way: he became wealthy, not by writing but through his share of the receipts of his acting company (the other full members of the troop profited equally well). Chute details his care in investing his earnings, primarily in real estate in his hometown.
In addition to being an astute businessman, I learned that Shakespeare seems to have been an amiable man, slow to take offense. In this way, too, he cut a different figure from Kit Marlowe, Ben Jonson, and others of the playwright guild.
Chute devotes some space to questions such as the extent of the canon and whether someone else wrote the plays. Suggestions that Shakespeare was a front for a nobleman who chose not to publish under his own name seem rooted in class snobbery. As appreciation for Shakespeare’s excellence rose, for some, it became unthinkable that the grandson of a tenant farmer could have authored them. Nor does the argument from his lack of time at a university carry weight. In Chute’s telling, university men who wrote good plays, such as Marlowe and Jonson, did so despite being hobbled by the theoretical strictures they absorbed there.
As to the vexed question of canon: ironically, here, too, it is Shakespeare’s excellence that opened the door to theories of collaboration and misattribution. He was so good, the argument goes, that he was incapable of writing even one mediocre line. Yet accepting “Henry VI” as his demonstrates that he didn’t arrive fully formed but had to learn as he went. And admitting that “Henry VIII” (written after he retired from the stage) and not “The Tempest” was his last shows that even the deepest springs of genius are not inexhaustible and that he was wise to retire when he did.
Finally, I was interested in Chute’s observation that timing was a part of Shakespeare’s success. He arrived in London at a time when there was an enthusiastic theater-going public and before the Puritan ascendance that silenced the stage for two generations following Shakespeare’s death. This interplay of individual genius and the contingencies of time and place gives pause for thought.
Profile Image for Paisley.
14 reviews
April 23, 2025
I don’t think I have ever read such a boring book. School why? 😭😭
Profile Image for Russell Dyer.
Author 9 books5 followers
August 3, 2025
Whenever I plan to attend a performance of one of Shakespeare's plays, I do at least two things to prepare. I read or reread the play. I prefer the Royal Shakespeare Company editions: the printing is clear -- white paper with crisp fonts; and I like their footnotes, which I read most of them. If it's a first time reading the play, I read it once stopping for all of the footnotes, then I read it again without looking at the footnotes. Before all of that, though, I read text from Chute's book on the play.

Shakespeare's style of writing in verse can be beautiful and it says more than normal prose. Still, it can also be confusing, making it difficult to follow the story. Even when performed, if I don't read a description and the play first, it can feel like you're watching a foreign film in which you have a basic knowledge of the language.

By reading Chute's chapter on the play first, I know the story before starting to read the play. Then I'm not confused and can pull apart the lines for more understanding -- with the help of good footnotes like the RSC editions provide. A second reading comes more alive for me, makes the play more enjoyable. Then I can go to the play and see how the actors and their director interpret the play. I'm always surprised at what they bring out of the play that I did not envision in my reading and analysis.

To sum up, start with this book before reading a Shakespeare play, and read the play before attending a performance of it. Forget about spoilers. Shakespeare can't be spoiled.
Profile Image for Kelley.
599 reviews17 followers
August 5, 2019
Here’s what Marchette Chute said she wanted to do: “This book is an attempt to bring a very great man into the light of common day. It is an attempt to show William Shakespeare as his contemporaries saw him, rather than as the gigantic and legendary figure he has become since. He was once life size, and this is an attempt at a life-sized portrait.”

In a remarkably readable way, Chute accomplishes exactly that. She brings the man to life, weaving stage history and political history and social history in a seamless story that is about Shakespeare first and London second, but only barely.

She does this through the most lifeless of documents – real estate records, tax bills, parish lists – and through the more personal – wills, letters, notes in the margins of books and scripts.

With great care, she tells only the story that exists in contemporary records, gently but firmly peeling away the apocryphal episodes added as Shakespeare’s stature swelled after his death. She circled back insistently to Shakespeare’s actual livelihood – acting – and demonstrated how it would have informed his writing.

He understood intimately, for example, the possibilities and demands of bringing a battle to life on stage.

“Not being content with savage, realistic fights in its theatre productions, the London audience also expected to see bloody deaths and mutilations; and it was necessary to find some way to run a sword through an actor’s head or tear out his entrails without improving his usefulness for the next afternoon’s performance.”

Somehow, in two semesters of college Shakespeare, I managed to miss (or have since forgotten!) the fact that almost all his plays are retellings of old stories or even other plays. His genius, Chute argues, is in his poetry and his characterization. A stiff story came to life on his page and on the stage with his troupe.

He used massive numbers of characters in some of his English histories, forcing actors to take multiple roles – and manage multiple speedy costume changes.

“The action of the play had to be carefully arranged to make all this doubling possible, and if the historical events interfered with practical stagecraft it was history that had to be altered.”

His casual handling of facts and chronology infuriated some higher-minded writers, including his friend Ben Jonson. But Chute makes gentle fun of those who idolized the classical unities and traditions that shielded the audience from the most intense moments.

She writes of one university play that had a “use of messengers so correct that none of the action of the story took place on the stage at all.”

Chute doesn’t dismiss the literary quality of some of these other works, but she gives Shakespeare the credit for characters who lived and breathed through his words – exactly what his audiences of real people wanted.

“They did not want words to be treated as masters, to be respectfully arranged according to the best rules. They wanted them to be treated as servants, to bring them real people and real emotions.”

If you have any love for Shakespeare or for London, you should not miss this book.
Profile Image for Richard Ferguson.
Author 11 books80 followers
April 13, 2025
Shakespeare of London by Marchette Chute is a delightful and fascinating book about the city Shakespeare roamed in, wrote his plays in, and the people he chummed around with. His lawsuits, acting career, playwrighting, competitors, audiences, and aggravations are all set forth in the most entertaining and enlightening manner. Shakespeare and his contemporaries were blessed with the protection of Elizabeth I and James I against the Puritan’s zeal to close down all theaters as being dens of iniquity and the devil’s work. However, on James’s death, Charles I closed the theaters. Nonetheless, by then Shakespeare was older and busy managing his properties and defending them in the courts. The book describes what it was like in London at that time and is particularly interesting in describing Shakespeare’s contemporaries. Playwrights like Thomas Kyd, Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson are brought to life by Chute. Stratford on Avon, Shakespeare's plays, and the actors in the King’s Men Company that performed them are also portrayed in fascinating detail. His legacy is timeless and the doggerel he wrote on his headstone says it all:
“Good friend, for Jesus’ sake forbear
To dig the dust enclosed here.
Blest be the man that spares these stones
And curst be he that moves my bones.”
Profile Image for Hank Hoeft.
452 reviews10 followers
February 24, 2018
This biography, first published in 1949, is still an excellent, thoroughly-researched, highly-readable biography of William Shakespeare. I always had the impression that little was known about Shakespeare's life because no one took any notice of him until well after he had died. But Marchette Chute has gleaned, from surviving public records and other documents, a tremendous amount of information about the life of the greatest poet and playwright, as well as a fascinating picture of what life was like in England in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. I teach Romeo and Juliet every year to ninth graders, and I'm kicking myself for waiting so long to read this book. This book would be of interest to anyone interested in Shakespeare, English literature, or English history.
Profile Image for Liz.
427 reviews1 follower
July 16, 2017
I cannot say enough about Chute's work: its scholarship, its humor, its contextualization of Shakespeare's life and work. There are memorable insights in every chapter, particularly about the audiences for which the playwright worked. "Elizabethan London was the home of the short-cut, with each of its inhabitants wanting to know as much as possible as quick as he could," she writes, in explanation of why so many gravitated to cities in the late 1500s; Shakespeare shared this ambition with those who paid to see his plays (64). Chute emphasizes that Shakespeare's ear for language may have been a natural-born gift, but his plays were the result of hard work and art. Don't miss the Appendix explaining the publication of the First Folio as his friends' and colleagues' most important memorial to Shakespeare.
Profile Image for Susanne.
427 reviews24 followers
November 18, 2020
This book is exquisite in its depth of detail and readability. Chute traces Shakespeare's time in London with such depth and care that I find it preposterous to believe that anyone else could have penned the 37 plays attributed to William Shakespeare.

This book could easily have been boring, a snore-fest, but Marchette Chute's 1949 book is anything but. I found it endlessly fascinating and definitely readable.

For fans of Shakespeare, this book is one of the best explorations of Shakespeare's life in London, away from his wife and children.
740 reviews
November 6, 2021
Engaging writing throughout, this book gives the reader in-depth history of British theatre during Shakespeare's life. Chute is working from contemporary sources only, and she is clearly convinced that Shakespeare was a genuinely likable man as well as a brilliant writer and actor. I'd like to read other biographies to see how they line up...
Profile Image for Robert Paul Olsen.
106 reviews3 followers
November 16, 2017
To begin with I must give this book at least another half star as it was an incredulously interesting and entertaining account of Shakespeare's life. Chute actually brings Shakespeare to life for me in her never tiring account of this mans dedicated life on the stage, simply marvelous.


28 reviews
March 23, 2017
I have tried reading books about Shakespeare before, and for whatever reason they always seemed a little dry and I had problems finishing them. This may be the first book I read that was interesting, well written and filled in a lot of the details about life in that time period. I would definitely recommend it to anybody that was interested in learning more about Shakespeare and theaters in the 1600s.
Profile Image for ChrissieP.
145 reviews
September 2, 2024
This author surmises that Shakespeare’s free and lyrical approach to his writing can be attributed to that schools during his day were only teaching in Latin.
Profile Image for Cliff Ward.
151 reviews5 followers
May 7, 2018
Ever wondered why you didn't understand Shakespeare? Thought it was the complicated English, or that you were not clever enough? But it's mostly because Shakespeare is about acting on a stage and his writings were mostly written to be seen and heard, not read.
This book breaks down each of the Comedies, the Tragedies and the Histories into simple easy to understand stories. We can then see in a nutshell the allure of Hamlet, Othello, or The Merry Wives of Windsor without reading the whole play.
Some of the Histories are perhaps hard to get through but Shakespeare lived in a time of political correctness of the Queen's axe which would chop of his head if he said the wrong thing.
Profile Image for Evelyn.
Author 1 book33 followers
September 9, 2024
Not bad for a one-dollar book sale find. All 36 plays are condensed here into no more than ten pages each. I did find the style a bit juvenile in places, but then the author was trying to write for all ages and education levels. I think I'd like to read "The Merchant of Venice" and "As You Like It" as well as one or two others. This book is wonderful for getting an idea of what the plays are about, and anyone interested in Shakespeare can get a taste for it here. It is an old book, written in the 1950s, so it might be a bit hard to find a copy. I can't believe that for many years (too many to count) that Shylock is actually the character who wants his "pound of flesh".
Profile Image for Connie Lacy.
Author 14 books71 followers
January 28, 2016
While this book was published in 1949 it does not seem dated at all. Marchette Chute sounds like a modern author and an author who knows her stuff. With very few actual records to draw on, she writes an engrossing story of the political, social and religious environment during which Shakespeare lived and wrote his masterpieces. A fascinating read. And the records she cites appear to debunk the myths about Shakespeare not being the author of his own body of work. Highly recommended for history buffs.
Profile Image for Margaret Garry.
22 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2016
This is really wonderful. Chute is thorough, witty, and does excellent research as she reconstructs in prose the world in which Shakespeare lived. For me, it was really wonderful to learn more about the context and place in which he lived. You can almost visualize a London very different from the one we see today, and see how its cultural and political environment affected the development of plays and the theatre. I'm excited to read Chute's biographies of Chaucer and Jonson in the future.
68 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2016
Interesting book, but showing its age. Chute lets little American, mid-western value judgements creep in. And its a history that frequently uses terms such as "probably" and "it is likely that" without anything to back up such claims. But apparently we know a lot more about Shakespeare's private life than I realised. This book seems to cover every commercial transaction that is on the record. Not a great deal about the plays, but a good insight into the operation of Tudor theatres.
950 reviews17 followers
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August 1, 2016
Unlike most other books about Shakespeare, this one details his working relationships with fellow actors in the London playhouses, the plays performed and costumes used, the tours undertaken each year, and also gives vast detail about life and the people of his home town of Stratford upon Avon.
An interesting point that is relevant now is: 'Upon the death of Elizabeth I in 1603, anyone older than 50 could not remember a time when there was not a man on the throne'.
Profile Image for Arnulfo Velasco.
116 reviews4 followers
September 17, 2016
Éste es un libro ya antiguo pero que, desde mi punto de vista, sigue siendo un modelo de trabajo serio en su acercamiento a Shakespeare y a su obra. Muchos de los comentarios que hace el autor ayudan a entender de mejor forma la época y el sentido del teatro isabelino, lo mismo que la distancia que nos separa de esa cultura. Pero, por otro lado, también demuestra la habilidad de Shakespeare para crear textos que siguen funcionando para un tiempo muy diferente al suyo.
70 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2019
I've not read nor attended any of the plays since high school (many many years ago), and thought that I'd bone-up before attempting to do so.
The author set herself a hard task, and I think she failed. The stories seemed to me to be incoherent - maybe that's the best that can be done in a 'less than Reader's Digest' format.
Possibly this book could be useful before one actually reads or attends one of the plays, but it in-fact has dissuaded me from doing so.
Profile Image for William Wilson.
2 reviews1 follower
January 31, 2011
Si tratta della versione "bignami" di quattro opere classiche del Bardo: in una cinquantina di pagine un lettore pigro può trovare un riassunto del "Mercante di Venezia", del "Sogno di una notte di mezza estate", dell'"Amleto" e del "Giulio Cesare".

Consigliato solo a chi abbia già letto le versioni integrali e si trovi nella situazione di avere bisogno di una rinfrescatina per la memoria.

Profile Image for Ali Hamadi.
8 reviews
February 6, 2024
5 iconic simplified Shakespearean stories, this is a book for English beginners (A2 level) or those who don't have the time to delve in depth in Shakespeare's literature. My personal favorite is "Juliis Caesar", which made me consider reading the original. The other stories varied from entertaining to meh. A solid summarization of the originals!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 50 reviews

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