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Paperback The Norton Shakespeare: Based on the Oxford Edition: Romances and Poems Book

ISBN: 0393931439

ISBN13: 9780393931433

The Norton Shakespeare: Based on the Oxford Edition: Romances and Poems

(Part of the The Norton Shakespeare Series)

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$6.59
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Book Overview

The attractive print and digital bundle offers students a great reading experience at an affordable price in two ways--a hardcover volume for their dorm shelf and lifetime library, and a digital... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great for Class

I needed this for college and it's a splendid collection. The introductions are wonderful and the footnotes and glosses extremely helpful.

Convenient

I'm taking a shakespeare class, and bringing one of these books to class is much more convenient than carrying the giant onionskin all in one version. The page numbers are of course different, but the pages are laid out exactly the same and contains the same introductory material as the one book version. Definitely worth the extra 15 dollars this version cost, and it looks prettier on my bookshelf.

Good seller

The book was in really good condition and I got it on time. I recommend.

Nice for a Paperback

This is a very nice collection of all of Shakespeare's works. There's information about each play and there are footnotes on the bottom of the pages to help you out. The only problem I had with this book was the paper for the pages is a little too thin and I wish the glossary had more words Shakespeare used in his works. I highly recommend this book.

The last great plays

"The Winter's Tale"," Pericles" "Cymbeline" and " The Tempest" are generally classified as Romances. The Romance is taken to be a mixed form which has both tragic and comic elements. It usually concludes with a 'happy ending' a masque and a dance. But somehow the 'happy ending' is less harmonious than in the comedies. And there is a sense of a more forced complicated resolution. The great Romances deal with the themes of Appearance and Reality, of Dream and Reality. As in all Shakespeare they are rich in incredibly beautiful poetry which redeems them even when they touch upon the absurd.
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