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David Miller
David Miller is on page 809 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
As You Like It illustrates a common phenomenon in Shakespeare's plays, namely the surprising ease with which a person can disguise themselves effectively enough to fool even their own parents. Not enough characters avail themselves of this strategy throughout the various plays, if you ask me.
Jan 27, 2026 10:24PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 773 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
Henry V contains astonishingly more lines of French than any play thus far, and unfortunately my French is not good enough to know how much of it was comically bad. With such amount of comedy between the dramatics, I would really like to know why Shakespeare decided there was no room for a return of Falstaff.
Dec 22, 2025 10:20PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 732 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
Beatrice is certainly one of the best women that Shakespeare has written thus far, and Much Ado About Nothing is overall a delight.
Dec 03, 2025 01:59PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 697 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
The Henry IV plays are definitely my favorite so far of the English history set. I look forward to Henry V, as this character is by far the most interesting royal character thus far. I will probably enjoy the Merry Wives of Windsor even more, as Falstaff is even better.
Nov 16, 2025 06:10PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 613 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
The Merchant of Venice is a very disturbing play, even though it is very interesting and occasionally very funny. Shylock is clearly more than just a bloodthirsty monster, but the narrative treats him little better than one. It is a tangled text, and I'm not sure I would even want to see it performed except out of morbid curiosity.
Aug 27, 2025 12:50PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 579 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
Most of my favorite parts of The Life and Death of King John were in Act I. Somehow, the endless speeches of noblemen accusing one another of treachery, and then committing treachery, do not rise above the jokes about bastardry.
Aug 24, 2025 01:22PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 541 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
It's amazing the varieties of stories Shakespeare told in his plays. Up to A Midsummer Night's Dream all the plays had been more or less realistic, but now there are fairies switching people's heads with donkeys', and otherwise traipsing about causing mischief no earthly power can hold them accountable for. I would guess this was, for Shakespeare, one of the most fun to write.
Jun 08, 2025 05:44PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 511 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
The hip cliche is that Romeo and Juliet are a couple of dumb kids who make rash decisions and die. They do make rash decisions and they do die, but while they're overdramatic in the way of teenagers, they're not nearly as foolish as nearly everybody else.
May 24, 2025 08:42AM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 468 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
As in many Shakespeare plays, noblemen accusing one another of being liars, traitors, etc. is a defining feature of Richard II, and for the most part they are all correct; nearly every character is guilty of something grave under the terms of their own code of ethics. It's kind of hard when you're this devoted to monarchy, but you believe this particular monarch sucks.
May 19, 2025 11:57AM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 430 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
Love's Labors Lost is the weirdest of the plays so far, the first comedy to not only lean on a strange premise but to resolve it in the strangest way possible. I also think it's one of the best.
Apr 16, 2025 07:10PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 394 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
The Two Gentlemen of Verona—what after all is a little scheming and betrayal between friends?
Apr 06, 2025 05:46PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 365 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
There are some very funny bits in The Taming of the Shrew, but the last two acts will make you feel like a bad person if you keep laughing.
Mar 27, 2025 01:09PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 328 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
Just finished Titus Andronicus. Is anybody else hungry for pie?
Mar 15, 2025 01:26PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 294 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
"The Comedy of Errors" is thoroughly ridiculous. Bonkers. Nuts. Great fun was had by all.
Mar 05, 2025 07:25PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 270 of 1675 of Shakespeare: The Complete Works
Four straight plays on the events of the War of the Roses is kind of a lot, but fortunately they keep getting better. Richard III is an evil delight.
Feb 19, 2025 04:34PM Add a comment
Shakespeare: The Complete Works

David Miller
David Miller is on page 156 of 492 of Moby Dick
Man, Captain Ahab *really* hates this whale.
Jul 14, 2023 08:20AM Add a comment
Moby Dick

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