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Much Ado About Murder: All-New Shakespeare-Inspired Mystery Stories

Much Ado About Murder: All-New Shakespeare-Inspired Mystery Stories

List Price: $23.95
Your Price: $16.77
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: all?s well with this anthology
Review: All seventeen tales in this enchanting mystery collection depicts the world is an Elizabethan stage. Well known genre writers fill the anthology with strong sounds and fury making for an entertaining time for the spectators, but several are particularly excellent plays on Shakespeare's works leading to a quality rarely seen in a short story collection. The best stories are those that follow the Tom Stoppard approach (see Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead) by employing characters and allusions from the Bard's works with a twist like placing protagonists into a legal thriller or changing the focus of whom is the star. Except perhaps soliloquies of heresy from English literature professors or a complaint from the Dark Lady, MUCH ADO ABOUT MURDER is much ado about entertainment as Will is modernized by a genre crowd that pays homage to the great one in an all's well anthology.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: all¿s well with this anthology
Review: All seventeen tales in this enchanting mystery collection depicts the world is an Elizabethan stage. Well known genre writers fill the anthology with strong sounds and fury making for an entertaining time for the spectators, but several are particularly excellent plays on Shakespeare's works leading to a quality rarely seen in a short story collection. The best stories are those that follow the Tom Stoppard approach (see Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead) by employing characters and allusions from the Bard's works with a twist like placing protagonists into a legal thriller or changing the focus of whom is the star. Except perhaps soliloquies of heresy from English literature professors or a complaint from the Dark Lady, MUCH ADO ABOUT MURDER is much ado about entertainment as Will is modernized by a genre crowd that pays homage to the great one in an all's well anthology.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Could have been a lot better!
Review: For anyone who has read any of the other historical mystery anthologies, this latest will seem weak in comparison. I'm trying to recall at least one story that stood out from the rest...can't do it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Ah, Brave New Book That Has Such Stories In't!
Review: Kudos, applause, and a standing ovation for Anne Perry and this fantastic book of short stories. There are so many truly unique and amazing stories that it's hard to choose which is best. Some involve actual Shakespearean plots, including two of the funniest: Too Many Cooks, which is a hilarious take on Macbeth from the point of view of the three Weird Sisters, and The Fall of the House of Oldenbourg, which will assure that you never think of Hamlet the same way again. Those Are Pearls That Were His Eyes combines characters from The Tempest with Portia & her husband Bassanio of The Merchant of Venice as the most brilliant and beautiful Doctor of Laws solves a murder with Caliban as the accused. The beautiful Viola (disguised as Caesario disguised as Viola--shades of Victor/Victoria and Shakespeare in Love!) solves the murder of Olivia's brother in A Dish of Poison. Even two of the lesser known plays, Cymbeline and Measure for Measure feature in the stories. Some, like Anne Perry's excellent Ere I Killed Thee, deal with the players who perform these works. The bard himself appears in several of the stories, including Exit, Followed. . .and All the World's a Stage, and his death is investigated in The Serpent's Tooth. And Richard's Children can only be described as chilling. I wish that there had been stories based on Romeo and Juliet, The Taming of the Shrew, and Midsummer's Night's Dream, but perhaps there will be a volume 2. One can only hope. This is a fantastic book for mystery lovers and for Shakespeare lovers, but heaven for those who, like myself, love them both. Buy it, read it, and recommend it to your friends!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Ah, Brave New Book That Has Such Stories In't!
Review: Kudos, applause, and a standing ovation for Anne Perry and this fantastic book of short stories. There are so many truly unique and amazing stories that it's hard to choose which is best. Some involve actual Shakespearean plots, including two of the funniest: Too Many Cooks, which is a hilarious take on Macbeth from the point of view of the three Weird Sisters, and The Fall of the House of Oldenbourg, which will assure that you never think of Hamlet the same way again. Those Are Pearls That Were His Eyes combines characters from The Tempest with Portia & her husband Bassanio of The Merchant of Venice as the most brilliant and beautiful Doctor of Laws solves a murder with Caliban as the accused. The beautiful Viola (disguised as Caesario disguised as Viola--shades of Victor/Victoria and Shakespeare in Love!) solves the murder of Olivia's brother in A Dish of Poison. Even two of the lesser known plays, Cymbeline and Measure for Measure feature in the stories. Some, like Anne Perry's excellent Ere I Killed Thee, deal with the players who perform these works. The bard himself appears in several of the stories, including Exit, Followed. . .and All the World's a Stage, and his death is investigated in The Serpent's Tooth. And Richard's Children can only be described as chilling. I wish that there had been stories based on Romeo and Juliet, The Taming of the Shrew, and Midsummer's Night's Dream, but perhaps there will be a volume 2. One can only hope. This is a fantastic book for mystery lovers and for Shakespeare lovers, but heaven for those who, like myself, love them both. Buy it, read it, and recommend it to your friends!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A "Writeous" Take on Shakespeare!
Review: Much Ado about Murder submitted Jan. 5, 2003

It's "murther most foul" and what a delightful romp it is, to read a selection of some 17 short
stories dealing with crime in Shakespeare's own tales. With an introduction by Anne Perry, this
collection explores "the human condition" that Shakespeare so delighted in presenting--but with a
twist. These stories--each by different authors--takes a scene, characters, or situation and turns it
into an exloration of the crime. As these established authors (in their own "write") take a page from
the Bard, the reader is the winner, as each of the stories is a delight to read. One's favorite will
depend, of course, upon one's Shakespearean preferences!
For a creative and humorous approach to "Hamlet" (both the young man and the play), try
Robert Barnard's "The Fall of the House of Oldenburg." The Melancholy Dane has not been
presented in such a fashion before. Barnard employs his usual skill in allusions, clever puns, and
references to the original work. "Delightful" probably best describes this story.
And for a more serious side, Edward Marston's "Squinting at Death" gives us another turn
on the "Henry V" stories. Tragedy is not quite the same. Brendan DuBois enters into the world of
international conspiracies with "Richard's Children" and leaves the reader with more than just
"food for thought."
P.C. Doherty, to list another story, makes a most readable "mystery" out of Shakespeare's
own death, employing a few tricks in the writing trade to provide insight into an author's life (and
death) that we really know very little about.
And so it goes, a variety into the spice of Shakespeare's tales, with other stories by such
notables as Peter Tremayne, Margaret Frazer, Jeffrey Deaver, Sharon Newman, and Simon Brett,
to name a few.
Clever, delightful, skillful, readable. This collection is well worth the effort! (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Could have been a lot better!
Review: Much Ado About Murder is a collection of seventeen mystery stories stiched together by the common thread of Shakespeare's plays. All were written especially for this anthology edited by Anne Perry. Some put new twists on characters or plots lifted from the plays while others are about the actors performing the plays or about the Bard himself.

In the former category, Marcia Talley tells a humorous tale starring the three witches from Macbeth. In the title story, Kathy Lynn Emerson transports Beatrice and Benedict from Padua to Bloody Mary's England for an adventure. Lillian Stewart Carl has Twlth Night's Duke Orsini send Viola/Cesario to Olivia's castle as a spy rather than an intermediary. Posing as a kitchen maid, she solves the poisoning of Olivia's brother. The Tempest, Henry V and VI, Hamlet, and Anthony and Cleopatra serve as launch pads for other writers' imaginings.

In the latter category, my favorite is P C Doherty's The Sperpent's Tooth which offers an interesting answer to the puzzle of Shakespeare's death and his epitaph. Also enjoyable is Peter Tremayne's Elizabethan sleuth, Master Hardy Drew, solving the murder of an actor in the first production of Henry V. Perry herself contributes a mystery set in a Victorian production of Othello.

The only story that seems out of place is Richard's Children by Brendan DuBois. It's connection to Richard III is tenuous and the plot belongs with the likes of Robert Ludlum.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Shakespearean Capers
Review: Much Ado About Murder is a collection of seventeen mystery stories stiched together by the common thread of Shakespeare's plays. All were written especially for this anthology edited by Anne Perry. Some put new twists on characters or plots lifted from the plays while others are about the actors performing the plays or about the Bard himself.

In the former category, Marcia Talley tells a humorous tale starring the three witches from Macbeth. In the title story, Kathy Lynn Emerson transports Beatrice and Benedict from Padua to Bloody Mary's England for an adventure. Lillian Stewart Carl has Twlth Night's Duke Orsini send Viola/Cesario to Olivia's castle as a spy rather than an intermediary. Posing as a kitchen maid, she solves the poisoning of Olivia's brother. The Tempest, Henry V and VI, Hamlet, and Anthony and Cleopatra serve as launch pads for other writers' imaginings.

In the latter category, my favorite is P C Doherty's The Sperpent's Tooth which offers an interesting answer to the puzzle of Shakespeare's death and his epitaph. Also enjoyable is Peter Tremayne's Elizabethan sleuth, Master Hardy Drew, solving the murder of an actor in the first production of Henry V. Perry herself contributes a mystery set in a Victorian production of Othello.

The only story that seems out of place is Richard's Children by Brendan DuBois. It's connection to Richard III is tenuous and the plot belongs with the likes of Robert Ludlum.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A "Writeous" Take on Shakespeare!
Review: Much Ado about Murder submitted Jan. 5, 2003

It's "murther most foul" and what a delightful romp it is, to read a selection of some 17 short
stories dealing with crime in Shakespeare's own tales. With an introduction by Anne Perry, this
collection explores "the human condition" that Shakespeare so delighted in presenting--but with a
twist. These stories--each by different authors--takes a scene, characters, or situation and turns it
into an exloration of the crime. As these established authors (in their own "write") take a page from
the Bard, the reader is the winner, as each of the stories is a delight to read. One's favorite will
depend, of course, upon one's Shakespearean preferences!
For a creative and humorous approach to "Hamlet" (both the young man and the play), try
Robert Barnard's "The Fall of the House of Oldenburg." The Melancholy Dane has not been
presented in such a fashion before. Barnard employs his usual skill in allusions, clever puns, and
references to the original work. "Delightful" probably best describes this story.
And for a more serious side, Edward Marston's "Squinting at Death" gives us another turn
on the "Henry V" stories. Tragedy is not quite the same. Brendan DuBois enters into the world of
international conspiracies with "Richard's Children" and leaves the reader with more than just
"food for thought."
P.C. Doherty, to list another story, makes a most readable "mystery" out of Shakespeare's
own death, employing a few tricks in the writing trade to provide insight into an author's life (and
death) that we really know very little about.
And so it goes, a variety into the spice of Shakespeare's tales, with other stories by such
notables as Peter Tremayne, Margaret Frazer, Jeffrey Deaver, Sharon Newman, and Simon Brett,
to name a few.
Clever, delightful, skillful, readable. This collection is well worth the effort! (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)


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