Those Shakespearean scholars can be a tetchy bunch, indeed. Now along comes Ron Rosenbaum, tossing his own molotov cocktail into the mix in the form of The Shakespeare Wars.
Hot issue number one: Which version of Hamlet should we use? There are three different early texts of the play. Does the Folio text — the Folio being the first printed collection of Shakespeare's plays — represent Shakespeare revising his own work, or a theatre manager cutting lines so the play moves along faster on the stage?
Scholars argue the question with barely concealed ferocity. At stake is not only academic status but also jobs and income from what Rosenbaum calls the "Shakespeare studies publishing-industrial complex." Who is going to be chosen editor of the new college Shakespeare anthology? You can bet this is not a trivial question in academia.
Speaking of Shakespeare*, we're very excited about the re-release of Tom Stoppard's only novel, the exhaustingly hilarious Lord Malquist and Mr. Moon, newly available courtesy of Grove Press. This has been difficult to track down for years (well, before Bookfinders, at any rate), so we urge you Stoppard fans to pounce on it - it's certainly better than Rock n' Roll.
* You know, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, etc. OK, a reach but we wanted to plug this title.
For an alternate take on Rosenbaum--and a more complicated reading of the whole situation--check out James Shapiro's piece in BookForum. But both reviews make it sound like a fun book to read.
Posted by: michael gorra | September 26, 2006 at 06:06 AM