Shakespeare: The World as Stage by Bill Bryson

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Bill Bryson is not a Shakespeare scholar, and his brief biography of Shakespeare (published 2007 for HarperCollins as part of the Eminent Lives series) reflects that. The tone of the book is light, accessible, and succinct. Bryson’s approach to the Bard was to admit the gaps in his life and rather focus on what we do know, that being the era he lived in, Elizabethan and Jacobean England.

For the casual reader interested in knowing a little bit about the Bard, including knowing just how much we don’t know, Shakespeare: The World as Stage will probably satisfy. In less than 200 pages, one gets a general overview of the possibilities for how Shakespeare’s life panned out, for some possible reasons he knew what he was writing about, and some of the controversies and influences his writing made on the culture of the world. It was a very quick and easy read and to be honest, I love the idea of reading more brief biographies in the Eminent Lives series. Those 600+ page biographies really take a long time to get through.

However, as approachable and easy-to-read as Bryson’s book was, I was disappointed. I have heard such great things about Bryson’s biography of the Bard that I was very excited to dive in to it. But the general feel of the book was far from satisfying for me.

From the beginning, I felt Bryson was simply summarizing the scholars’ biographies of Shakespeare and adding his conclusions and opinions on top of those summations. Bryson never referenced his quotes, facts, and opinions with clear endnotes (although he does provide a selected bibliography at the end). Although he sounds very persuasive in his claims and opinions, the fact is that he is not a Shakespeare scholar as the experts he’s summarizing.

Don’t get me wrong: it was nice to read a summary of other Shakespeare scholars’ conclusions. However, Bryson doesn’t clarify when he switches to his own opinions. It’s just all his words, no references. Obviously, each writer of a biography has his or her own biases: no one is immune. But Bryson just seems so unqualified to give his opinion I wondered why he was selected for the job.

In sum, while Bryson’s well written and engaging account of Shakespeare’s life definitely has a place for a casual reader interested in Shakespeare, it’s certainly not a scholarly work, and one I’d personally hesitate to recommend to someone wanting to learn about Shakespeare. I look forward to reading a biography that is well documented, and I wouldn’t mind reading a few such biographies to get a better picture of the man known as the Bard. Shakespeare’s influence is important enough to my modern culture to give him the benefit of professional and scholarly attention, not just a light-hearted summation of the true scholarship out there.

 A post for Allie’s Shakespeare Month.

Reviewed on February 4, 2012

About the author 

Rebecca Reid

Rebecca Reid is a homeschooling, stay-at-home mother seeking to make the journey of life-long learning fun by reading lots of good books. Rebecca Reads provides reviews of children's literature she has enjoyed with her children; nonfiction that enhances understanding of educational philosophies, history and more; and classical literature that Rebecca enjoys reading.

  • Interesting post. Bryson and I are hit and miss, but I think that’s a result more of his style than of his subject matter. I’ve never been that fascinated by Shakespeare, which is a bit shameful for an English major to admit, but maybe this would give the sort of light overview I need to not sound like I don’t know anything about the Bard.

    • Kim (Sophisticated Dorkiness) » It IS a good overview especially for those that aren’t that in to Shakespeare. Since I love him (thus far) and I’d read biographies before, I was a bit disappointed with this one. It just didn’t work for me. Bryson kind of bugged me…

  • You make a great point about the end notes. I didn’t consider that.

    I definitely felt like this book was a summary of everything that’s out there, but that Bryson gets to the point a lot faster. Definitely not scholarly though. I agree on that. (I don’t think scholarly works are necessarily better, just that this certainly wasn’t one…)

    The inserted opinions was the part that made me chuckle. It felt like reading an editorial. 🙂

    • Jillian » “gets to the point a lot faster” well yes, but it’s only his opinion on everything. I don’t know, I guess I just didn’t want an editorial. I WANTED scholarly this time around. So it’s my fault for expecting more or wanting more I guess. It would be a nice starting point for those who don’t know much, though.

  • I read this when it first came out. I didn’t love it, but it was interesting. At the time it was more because I had never read Bryson before and less about reading more about Shakespeare.

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