The Christian Science Monitor reviews Peter Ackroyd's The Lambs of London, his fictional take on Charles and Mary Lamb.
It doesn't matter where we grow up or when - the tendency to over-immerse in British literature can overtake any of us. And the dangers of overindulgence can be seen in Peter Ackroyd's wonderful The Lambs of London, which suggests that when you find that Shakespeare is on your mind and tongue just a bit too often, madness and danger may lie therein.
The real lives of 19th-century British essayist Charles Lamb and his sister Mary, also a writer ("Tales from Shakespeare") are the inspiration for Ackroyd's story of the high-strung siblings for whom literature looms just a bit too large as they desperately struggle to slip the smothering circumstances of their daily lives.
We've still got our first dog-eared copy of Tales from Shakespeare (available online here), which we bought with MOTEV when we visited Stratford-upon-Avon. It's a favorite, frequently visited title, to this date, more than 25 years later. (A sticker inside notes that it was "Purchased at Shakespeare's birthplace.)


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