Fountaindale Public Library

Fools and mortals, Bernard Cornwell

Label
Fools and mortals, Bernard Cornwell
Language
eng
Main title
Fools and mortals
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Bernard Cornwell
Summary
New York Times bestselling author Bernard Cornwell makes a dramatic departure with this enthralling, action-packed standalone novel that tells the story of the first production of A Midsummer's Night Dream?as related by William Shakespeare's estranged younger brother. Fools and Mortals takes us into the heart of one of the most exciting periods of British history?the Elizabethan era?and brings it to vivid, carnal life through the story behind one of Shakespeare's most famous plays. In the late sixteenth century as the English theater begins to flourish outside of London, a growing number of playhouses, playwrights, and actors vie for glory and success. In this bawdy, brutally competitive world, young actor Richard Shakespeare struggles to make his mark in a theater company dominated by his estranged older brother, William. Their rivalry is the centerpiece of this high-stakes story of conflict and betrayal. Demonstrating the superb storytelling skill that has won him international renown, Cornwell imagines an incredibly rich, meticulously detailed world in which glorious stagecraft, intense competition, and bold ambition combine to form a tangled web of intrigue
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

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