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Rating: Summary: Murder, Shakespeare Wrote! Review: "The Merchant of Vengeance"is the fourth in the lively, witty, and creatively clever series by Simon Hawke which features, of all people, William Shakespeare and his fellow Thespian Tuck Smythe! Mr. Hawke shows his command of Shakespeare as he develops a (sort of) mystery that invokes the Good Bard's name in vain quite often!Of course, one can enjoy this mystery series without having read a line of Shakespeare, but having some command of this most famous of playwrights is a plus. It's fun to see just how many Shakespearean allusions you can catch. In "Merchant," of course, Hawke provides a "background" of the more famous "Merchant of Venice." Shakespeare wishes to out play Christopher Marlow and to portray a Jew as a Jew thinks not as he is perceived. But there's the rub! Quickly Will and Tuck are embroiled in a murder and together they strut and fret their way to the final solution. Most of the story line is fairly predictable, but no matter. Mr. Hawke's entertaining book moves along, looking like the innocent flower and showing the serpent under it. Face face DOES hide false heart as the due screw their courage to the sticking place go for their pound of flesh! A fun read! (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)
Rating: Summary: Murder, Shakespeare Wrote! Review: "The Merchant of Vengeance"is the fourth in the lively, witty, and creatively clever series by Simon Hawke which features, of all people, William Shakespeare and his fellow Thespian Tuck Smythe! Mr. Hawke shows his command of Shakespeare as he develops a (sort of) mystery that invokes the Good Bard's name in vain quite often! Of course, one can enjoy this mystery series without having read a line of Shakespeare, but having some command of this most famous of playwrights is a plus. It's fun to see just how many Shakespearean allusions you can catch. In "Merchant," of course, Hawke provides a "background" of the more famous "Merchant of Venice." Shakespeare wishes to out play Christopher Marlow and to portray a Jew as a Jew thinks not as he is perceived. But there's the rub! Quickly Will and Tuck are embroiled in a murder and together they strut and fret their way to the final solution. Most of the story line is fairly predictable, but no matter. Mr. Hawke's entertaining book moves along, looking like the innocent flower and showing the serpent under it. Face face DOES hide false heart as the due screw their courage to the sticking place go for their pound of flesh! A fun read! (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)
Rating: Summary: A wonderful depiction of a young William Shakespeare. Review: Hawke writes his Shakespearean mystery series like a Shakespearean scholar. There are enough similarites in the plot, characters and language to hearken back to the play that the book is based from. In this case, The Merchant of Venice. In this book we see Will and Tuck embroiled in a family squabble that turns out to result in the death of a young journeyman tailor. As it turns out the young tailor is the son of the head of the Crime Guild, and because of that Tuck and Will are thrown smack in the middle of a vengeance ploy. As in the Merchant of Venice, even anti-Semitism is made a part of the plot of the book. This, the same as the other books in this series is a good fun mystery with lots of sparkling dialogue to keep things interesting.
Rating: Summary: A wonderful depiction of a young William Shakespeare. Review: Hawke writes his Shakespearean mystery series like a Shakespearean scholar. There are enough similarites in the plot, characters and language to hearken back to the play that the book is based from. In this case, The Merchant of Venice. In this book we see Will and Tuck embroiled in a family squabble that turns out to result in the death of a young journeyman tailor. As it turns out the young tailor is the son of the head of the Crime Guild, and because of that Tuck and Will are thrown smack in the middle of a vengeance ploy. As in the Merchant of Venice, even anti-Semitism is made a part of the plot of the book. This, the same as the other books in this series is a good fun mystery with lots of sparkling dialogue to keep things interesting.
Rating: Summary: A smart and humorous Elizabethan mystery Review: Simon Hawke's voice again brings his popular characterizations to life of fledgling playwright William Shakespeare and side-kick, would-be-thespian Symington Smythe. In a suitably complex plot, the story comes alive in the Elizabethan issues of marriage outside of ones class, anti-Semitism, and daily life in London's underworld. The level of detail shows that Hawke is fully comfortable in portraying this blend of historical fact and fiction. A good read, filled with a few unexpected twists and turns, and a number of tongue in cheek allusions to Shakespeare's plays that keep you grinning. A pleasant quick read for a spring or summer afternoon.
Rating: Summary: A smart and humorous Elizabethan mystery Review: Simon Hawke's voice again brings his popular characterizations to life of fledgling playwright William Shakespeare and side-kick, would-be-thespian Symington Smythe. In a suitably complex plot, the story comes alive in the Elizabethan issues of marriage outside of ones class, anti-Semitism, and daily life in London's underworld. The level of detail shows that Hawke is fully comfortable in portraying this blend of historical fact and fiction. A good read, filled with a few unexpected twists and turns, and a number of tongue in cheek allusions to Shakespeare's plays that keep you grinning. A pleasant quick read for a spring or summer afternoon.
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