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Mass Market Paperback Titus Andronicus Book

ISBN: 0671722921

ISBN13: 9780671722920

Titus Andronicus

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Titus Andronicus is the earliest tragedy and the earliest Roman play attributed to Shakespeare. Titus, a model Roman, has led twenty-one of his twenty-five sons to death in Rome's wars; he stabs another son to death for what he views as disloyalty to Rome. Yet Rome has become "a wilderness of tigers." After a death sentence is imposed on two of his three remaining sons, and his daughter is raped and mutilated, Titus turns his loyalty toward his family...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Michael Hordern

Michael Hordern did a superb acting job. I was very impressed with him, Anthony Qyayle as well. I first heard this performance on tape cassette and was thrilled to hear Judy Dench. She impressed me very much in Hamlet, Henry the 5th also. For a late bloomer (now 67) in the classics I really started gorging Shakespeare after Hordern, Dench, Brannah, Quayle and many others performances. I should have known better being raised in New Orleans but the school systems there was absorbed in jazz, rock and roll i.e. Pete Fountain, Al Hirt, Fats Dommino, Dixieland Jazz, Gospel,gut-wrenching Blues and sort of shaped me for 60 years which led me to listening to the Classics starting with Sabastian Bach.

Be careful what you read

I love the Folger Shakespeare editions because of the wonderful notes that are included, especially an overview at the end of the book by a current author. Of course this story is not for the faint-hearted, and don't make the the mistake of reading this particular Shakespeare story after eating Guinness and Beef pie! Your tummy might feel queasy.

Excellent Edition

I really enjoy the Folger Library version of Shakespeare's plays. They are great for teaching and better understanding Shakespeare.

Revenge is a dish best served piping hot from the oven...

If you have a weak stomach, you may want to stay the hell away from this play. Just about every disgusting thing that could happen to a human being, both mentally and physically, happens in this early Shakespeare tragedy.The pages run over with various forms of vile behavior. There's... dismemberment (just about every kind imaginable), torture, people being buried alive, betraying each other, fathers killing their own daughters and hacking off their own hands, and, most gruesomely, baking their enemies in meat pies and serving them to their next of kin on the dinner table.The last scene alone is enough to make you go vegetarian or at least seriously considering eating another pot-pie ever again. This is a fairly simple revenge tale, but the words and images Shakespeare uses to tell the tale are often breathtaking. It's certainly not as resonant or as deeply drawn as many of his later works--Macbeth and Hamlet are two of my favorites--but there are some great moments here, even if murder, mayhem,... aren't your cup of tea.

Shakespeare Outdoes Himself!

This was the first play performed at the Globe Theatre. For that reason alone, this play deserves special attention. But the characters, the language, and this interesting situation represent Shakespeare's finest efforts. Cassius is ruthless with a malicious attitude. But he honestly fears what Caesar will do if he is crowned. Brutus is a good and honest man. He contemplates joining Cassius to kill Caesar despite the fact that Caesar loves him as a friend. (In history as well, Caesar was notably kind to Brutus.) But yet he too fears that if Caesar is crowned, Rome will bleed. Mark Antony is convincing as Caesar's loyal aid who SEEMS insignificant at first. But after Caesar is killed, he emerges as the most powerful and intelligent character in the play. What makes this play so phenomenal is that we can easily understand and sympathize with any of these major characters. (Even though they are on opposite sides.) What's left? Only chilling omens like the Soothsayer, the storm, the ghost of Caesar, etc. Only memorable passages like Mark Antony's famous 'honorable' speech. If you like this play, I suggest the B & W version where James Mason does Brutus, John Gielgud does Cassius, and Marlon Brando does Mark Antony.
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