This edition represents Shakespeare's text as it appears in the most authoritative of early editions, the Folio, published in 1623, and it supplies students with useful footnotes to the interpretation of the text.
There was a fanfare and the king and queen entered and took their seats. Everyone fell silent as the play began. Hamlet made sure he could see his uncle's face. He didn't turn away, not even when the fat king kissed his mother's hand.
A scholarly examination of the plot and dramatic technique of Shakespeare's most controversial play
"A literary analysis of the play Hamlet. Includes information on the history and culture of Elizabethan England"--Provided by publisher.
Biographical information and critical essays accompany Shakespeare's play about a prince's wavering determination to avenge his father's murder
Presents a collection of essays discussing aspects of William Shakespeare's well-known tragedy from John Dryden in the seventeenth century to A.C. Bradley and William Epson in the twentieth century.
3.4.97–100) Hamlet's lines could be considered to be continuous with Gertrude's line overlapping. ... from a cue part by giving the actor playing Hamlet a continuous speech, and the actor playing Gertrude the cueline in his pocket'.
Levang, Lewis D., “'Ripeness is all': A Semantic Approach to a Lear Question,” Etc.: A Review of General Semantics, vol. 27 (1970), pp. 91-98. Levin, Harry, The Question of Hamlet, New York, 1959. Levin, William R., Images of Love and ...
Confronted with evidence that his uncle murdered his father, and with his mother’s infidelity, Hamlet must find a means of reconciling his longing for oblivion with his duty as avenger.
A hilarious, darkly comic graphic retelling of Shakespeare’s Hamlet in radically condensed prose by legendary Swedish children’s author Barbro Lindgren and illustrator Anna Höglund. Look Hamlet. Hamlet not happy. Hamlet’s mommy dumb.