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Hamlet: Prince of Denmark

Hamlet: Prince of Denmark

List Price: $26.98
Your Price: $17.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Scott's Hamlet Reveiw
Review: I felt that Hamlet Prince of Denmark was a very interesting book. I had a hard time understanding some parts because the subject matter was hard to follow. I believe that Shakespeares work is unparallel to any other. I didn't enjoy it because of the use of the "old" English. Some parts of the story were hard to follow because of this English. Other than that i felt the plot was good and had much information expressed. Almost too much information to the point of confusion.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Folger Version of Hamlet was easy to follow.
Review: Overall, I believe that this version was pretty easy to follow. As far as I can tell, it pretty closely followed other versions I looked at. The notes on every page greatly contributed to my understanding of the play. Hamlet kept my interest throughout the whole play. The only other tragedy that I've read of Shakespeare's is Romeo and Juliet. I liked Romeo and Juliet better than I liked Hamlet but I still thought that it was a good play. I think that I understood this version as well as could be suspected, considering that Shakespeare can be very difficult to read. My favorite character in Hamlet was Ophelia. I think that she best represented any person in the world today. She had qualities that almost anyone could relate to. In conclusion, I feel that the Folger version of Hamlet was very helpful in the understanding of Hamlet.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beyond rating
Review: This is Shakespeare's greatest play. Shakespeare is the greatest playwright the world has ever seen. Enough.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: it was one of shakespeares best plays
Review: I cried and I hated it to end. it was well ploted and it had a under handed character that does so well in this time period.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great book to use with students!
Review: I used, and will continue to use, this version of Shakespeare's Hamlet with my 10th grade literature students and had much success. The summaries of the acts and scenes are thorough and the wording of the play itself is easier to understand. The footnotes and side notes are handy for the students. I highly recommend this version to use in high school classrooms.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mousetrap
Review: Hamlet and his family have lived in Denmark. They stay in a castle at Elsinore. A short distance on the estate is an orchard with cool shade. The time is the afternoon. The king leaves to get some rest in the orchard. Time passes, and he does not return. The family becomes worried. Someone goes to the orchard and finds the king. The rumor is that he has been killed by a poisonous snake. A madness has fallen on Hamlet. Thus the deceased king's apparition is clearly seen and heard. For a time members of the family and others detect Hamlet's queer demeanor. As time passes, it is seen more frequently. It sounds as though he spent much of his salad days with the jester. A reader is not as easily mousetrapped as other readers about Hamlet's motives. The historical record shows that Emperor Claudius was poisoned by his wife so that her son, Nero, would inherit a throne.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Original Shakespeare text with a translator!
Review: We used this book in a drama class I took, and I fell in love with it! The orginial Shakespeare text on one side and modern English on the other is like a translator right there for you! It makes it easier to understand what is going on and what is being said in the story! Anyone who has to use Shakespeare can benefit from this line of books!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fab read!
Review: Okay, the first time I read this book, I HATED it. It was a part of my English course, and I dreaded even referring to it. As the year went on, my friends and I made so much fun of it, and we'd write so many parodies, that I got to know the book really well....and I started liking it. Whenever I read it now, I honestly find it sadistically funny! (the nunnery scene, and the duel in particular) I think it's a good book if you take your time with it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Unworthy of Shakespeare
Review: This has to be one of the worst plays ever written, Shakespeare or no Shakespeare. While the Bard was the master of English drama, he really slipped up here. The plot makes no sense, the characters motivations are contrived, and the jokes fall flat. I have read this play hundreds of times, seen umpteen productions and films, and am astonished at the plaudits universally accorded to it. The modern English translation by Daniel Nystedt, however, corrects many of these flaws (by eliminating the ghost and such unneccesary characters as Claudius, etc.) and overall is much more worthwhile.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't Read This Play
Review: There they lay, dead on the page, all the incomprehensible words of Shakespeare. I saw them all through school, starting with Macbeth in sixth grade. Then years later a girlfriend recorded on cassette for me the Hamlet of Paul Scofield and I played it night after night through the next two years as I commuted to school. Driving in the dead middle of the night through the pine forests of south Alabama the world I knew vanished, and all that remained was the world of Hamlet-- the prince maddened by grief, the treacherous uncle, the uncomprehending Gertrude, innocent Ophelia, her passionate brother and foolish father, faithful Horatio, the players and all the rest-- more alive to me than my own life.

To know Hamlet you cannot read it, you must hear it, whether on stage or elsewhere. And the more you hear it the more its lines come back to you, whether in earnest or in whimsy-- "safely stowed", "meet it is I set it down, that one may smile and smile, and be a villain", "thus conscience doth make cowards of us all, and thus the native hue of resolution is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought", "alas, poor Yorick. I knew him Horatio. A fellow of infinite jest." And so many more. If there is any hope that you will fall in love with language, then you will fall for Hamlet.

There is even some sense that you will never have completely spoken English until you have said the lines of Hamlet.

Paul Scofield has never been replaced in my affections by another Hamlet. If anyone knows where that recording might be found, I'd like to know.


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