Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (37 plays 160 sonnets and 5 Poetry Books With Active Table of Contents) - A Timeless Collection - cover

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (37 plays 160 sonnets and 5 Poetry Books With Active Table of Contents) - A Timeless Collection

William Shakespeare, Bluefire Books

Publisher: Bluefire Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Embark on a literary journey with "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare." This ebook collection features the entire repertoire of Shakespeare's plays, sonnets, and poems, providing an unparalleled opportunity to delve into the timeless works of the legendary playwright.

From tragedies to comedies, histories to sonnets, Shakespeare's works offer a profound exploration of the human condition. Each play is a masterpiece of storytelling, with intricate plots, memorable characters, and thought-provoking themes that continue to captivate readers across generations.

This meticulously crafted ebook edition ensures optimal readability, allowing you to fully immerse yourself in the language and beauty of Shakespeare's words. Seamlessly navigate through the collection and experience the depth of emotions, the wit, and the social commentary that have made Shakespeare an enduring literary icon.

Whether you're a scholar, a student, or a lover of classic literature, "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare" is an essential addition to your digital library. Rediscover the timeless brilliance of Shakespeare and explore the universal truths that continue to resonate with audiences around the world.

This collection gathers together the works by William Shakespeare in a single, convenient, high quality, and extremely low priced Kindle volume! It comes with 150 original illustrations which are the engravings John Boydell commissioned for his Boydell Shakespeare Gallery
This book contains now several HTML tables of contents that will make reading a real pleasure! easy-to-read and easy-to-navigate format.

The Comedies of William Shakespeare

A Midsummer Night's Dream
All's Well That Ends Well
As You Like It
Love's Labour 's Lost
Measure for Measure
Much Ado About Nothing
The Comedy of Errors
The Merchant of Venice
The Merry Wives of Windsor
The Taming of the Shrew
The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Twelfth Night; or, What you will

The Romances of William Shakespeare

Cymbeline
Pericles, Prince of Tyre
The Tempest
The Winter's Tale

The Tragedies of William Shakespeare

King Lear
Romeo and Juliet
The History of Troilus and Cressida
The Life and Death of Julius Caesar
The Life of Timon of Athens
The Tragedy of Antony and Cleopatra
The Tragedy of Coriolanus
The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
The Tragedy of Macbeth
The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice
Titus Andronicus

The Histories of William Shakespeare

The Life and Death of King John
The Life and Death of King Richard the Second
The Tragedy of King Richard the Third
The first part of King Henry the Fourth
The second part of King Henry the Fourth
The Life of King Henry V
The first part of King Henry the Sixth
The second part of King Henry the Sixth
The third part of King Henry the Sixth
The Life of King Henry the Eighth

The Poetical Works of William Shakespeare

The Sonnets
Sonnets to Sundry Notes of Music
A Lover's Complaint
The Rape of Lucrece
Venus and Adonis
The Phoenix and the Turtle
The Passionate Pilgrim
Available since: 05/15/2023.
Print length: 600 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • All Our Children (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    All Our Children (NHB Modern Plays)

    Stephen Unwin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'I used to be scared of them. They seemed so different. They don't scare me any more. They're just children, aren't they? Just children.'
    January 1941. A terrible crime is taking place in a clinic for disabled children. The perpetrators argue that it will help struggling parents and lift the financial burden on the mighty German state. One brave voice is raised in objection. But will the doctor listen?
    A moving examination of a terrifying moral dilemma, and a powerful story that shows what it takes for humanity and decency to be restored in a world that has abandoned them. First produced by Tara Finney Productions, Stephen Unwin's debut play All Our Children premiered at Jermyn Street Theatre, London, in 2017.
    Show book
  • Panic Response - cover

    Panic Response

    John McCullough

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    *SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2021 FORWARD PRIZE FOR BEST SINGLE POEM*
    From the mercurial mind of award-winning poet John McCullough comes his darkest and most experimental book to date. Panic Response puts personal and cultural anxiety under the microscope. It is full of things that shimmer, quiver and fizz: plankton glowing at low tide; brain tissue turning to glass; a basketball emerging from the waves, covered in barnacles. These are poems of uncertainty but also of hope, which move beyond the breathlessness of panic towards luminescence and solidarity.
    Show book
  • William Shakespeare - A Tribute in Verse - cover

    William Shakespeare - A Tribute...

    Ben Jonson, John Milton, Matthew...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    William Shakespeare was born in Stratford upon Avon in late April 1565 and baptized there on 26th April. He was one of eight children. Little is known about his life but what is evident is the enormous contribution he has made to World Literature.  His writing was progressive, magnificent in scope, and breathtaking in execution.  His plays and sonnets helped enable the English language to speak with a voice unmatched by any other. 
     
    William Shakespeare died on the 23rd April 1616, survived by his wife and two daughters.  He was buried two days after his death in the chancel of the Holy Trinity church. 
     
    Poets rarely praise another of their kind but Shakespeare deserved all their praise – and more.  And our poets down the centuries have been lavish and fulsome with him. Or to paraphrase the great Bard himself:—‘If words shall be the food of love, read on….’
    Show book
  • Things That Happen - And Other Poems (Unabridged) - cover

    Things That Happen - And Other...

    Bhaskar Chakrabarti

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Bhaskar Chakrabarti's poetry is synonymous with the romantic melancholia inherent to Calcutta. His trenchant poetic voice was one of the most significant to emerge in the 1960s and '70s-perhaps the most prolific period of modern Bengali poetry. Spanning the rise of militant leftism, the spread of crippling poverty across India, the war in Bangladesh, the influx of millions of refugees, the dark, dictatorial days of Indira Gandhi's reign, and the disillusionment of communist rule in Bengal, Chakrabarti's poems plumb the depths of urban angst, expressing the spirit of sadness and alienation in delicate metaphors wrapped in deceptively lucid language.In this first-ever comprehensive translation of Chakrabarti's work, award-winning translator Arunava Sinha masterfully articulates that clarity of vision, retaining the unique cadence and idioms of the Bengali language. Presenting verses and prose poems from all of Chakrabarti's life-from his first volume, When Will Winter Come, published in 1971, to his last, The Language of Giraffes, published just before his death in 2005, and collecting several unpublished works as well-Things That Happen and Other Poems introduces the world to a brilliant and universal poetic voice of urban life.
    Show book
  • The Woods Lakeboat Edmond - Three Plays - cover

    The Woods Lakeboat Edmond -...

    David Mamet

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    Three plays from the Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award–winning author of Glengarry Glen Ross and American Buffalo.  The Woods is a modern dramatic parable about, as Mamet put it, “why men and women have a hard time trying to get along with each other.” The story features a young man and woman spending a night in his family’s cabin where they experience passion, then disillusionment, but are in the end reconciled by mutual need.   In Lakeboat, an Ivy League college student takes a summer job as a cook aboard a Great Lakes cargo ship where the crewmembers—men of all ages—share their wild fantasies about sex, gambling, and violence. Mamet also wrote the screenplay to the 2000 film starring Peter Falk and Denis Leary.   In Edmond, a white-collar New York City man is set morally adrift after a visit to a fortune-teller. He soon leaves an unfulfilling marriage to find sex, adventure, companionship, and, ultimately, the meaning of his existence. Mamet also wrote the screenplay for the 2005 film starring William H. Macy.   “[A] beautifully conceived love story.” —Chicago Daily News on The Woods   “[Mamet’s] language has never been so precise, pure, and affecting.” —Richard Eder of The New York Times on The Woods   “Richly overheard talk and loopy, funny construction.” —Michael Feingold in The Village Voice on Lakeboat   “A riveting theatrical experience that illuminates the heart of darkness.” —Jack Kroll of Newsweek on Edmond
    Show book
  • Born in the USA - Exploring America in Poems - The Mid-Atlantic Poets - A celebration of American poetry - cover

    Born in the USA - Exploring...

    Wallace Stevens, Edith Wharton,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Poetry. A form of words that seems so elegantly simple in one verse and so cleverly complex in another.  Each poet has a particular style, an individual and unique way with words and yet each of us seems to recognise the path and destination of where the verses lead, even if sometimes the full comprehension may be a little beyond us. 
     
    Through the centuries every culture has produced verse to symbolize and to describe everything from everyday life, natural wonders, the human condition and even in its more hubristic moments, the crushing triumph of an enemy. 
     
    In the volumes of this series we take a look through the prism of individual regions of the United States through the centuries and decades. 
     
    The United States may be many things: the world’s policeman, a bully, a shameless purveyor of mass market culture but it also, in its better moments, a standard bearer for truth, transparency, equality and the more positive qualities of democracy. 
     
    Little wonder that’s its poets are rightly acknowledged as wonders of their art.  Leading lights in the fight against slavery and for equality, even if the rest of the Nation is finding it problematic to catch up.   
     
    In this volume we have collected verse from poets born in the prosaically named Mid-Atlantic region.  Within its boundaries, which have never been authoritatively agreed, are New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia.  Therefore it is easy to wax lyrical on what, and how, our esteemed poets including Walt Whitman, Frances W Harper, Edith Wharton, Willa Cather, William Carlos Williams and Herman Melville have penned in their gloried verse on the societies and lands before and around them.
    Show book