From Harold Bloom, one of the greatest Shakespeare scholars of our time as well as a beloved professor who has taught the Bard for over half a century, an intimate, wise, deeply compelling
portrait of Falstaff—Shakespeare’s greatest enduring and complex comedic character.
Falstaff is both a comic and tragic central protagonist in Shakespeare’s three Henry plays: Henry IV, Parts One and Two, and Henry V. He is companion to Prince Hal (the future Henry V), who
loves him, goads, him, teases him, indulges his vast appetites, and commits all sorts of mischief with him—some innocent, some cruel. Falstaff can be lewd, funny, careless of others, a bad
creditor, an unreliable friend, and in the end, devastatingly reckless in his presumption of loyalty from the new King.
Award-winning author and beloved professor Harold Bloom writes about Falstaff with the deepest compassion and sympathy and also with unerring wisdom. He uses the relationship between Falstaff
and Hal to explore the devastation of severed bonds and the heartbreak of betrayal. Just as we encounter one type of Anna Karenina or Jay Gatsby when we are young adults and another when we are
middle-aged, Bloom writes about his own shifting understanding of Falstaff over the course of his lifetime. Ultimately we come away with a deeper appreciation of this profoundly complex
character, and the book as a whole becomes an extraordinarily moving argument for literature as a path to and a measure of our humanity.
Bloom is mesmerizing in the classroom, wrestling with the often tragic choices Shakespeare’s characters make. He delivers that kind of exhilarating intimacy and clarity in Falstaff,
inviting us to look at a character as a flawed human who might live in our world. The result is deeply intimate and utterly compelling.
-
The Reception of Aeschylus’ Plays Through Shifting Models and Frontiers
$7,560 -
The Grotesque in Contemporary Anglophone Drama
$4,500 -
The Gentle, Jealous God: Reading Euripides’ Bacchae in English
$5,130 -
Art and Political Thought in Bole Butake
$3,375 -
Edward Albee and Absurdism
$5,625 -
The Shakespearean International Yearbook: Special Section, Shakespeare on Site
$6,748 -
The Theater of Experiment: Staging Natural Philosophy in Eighteenth-Century Britain
$3,510 -
The Shakespearean Inside: A Study of the Complete Soliloquies and Solo Asides
$4,725 -
Tom Stoppard’s Plays: Patterns of Plenitude and Parsimony
$10,215 -
Shakespeare’s Dramatic Persons
$3,600 -
The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish Theatre
$6,750 -
The New Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works: Critical Reference Edition
$13,500 -
The Oxford Handbook of Shakespearean Tragedy
$6,750 -
Shakespeare Studies
$2,925 -
The Revenger’s Tragedy: A Critical Reader
$4,230 -
Shakespeare’s Women and the Fin De Siecle
$4,725 -
A Philosophy of Comedy on Stage and Screen: You Have to Be There
$1,798 -
Verse Drama in England, 1900-2015: Art, Modernity and the National Stage
$4,230 -
Finding Shakespeare’s New Place: An Archaeological Biography
$1,123 -
Drama Criticism: Criticism of the Most Significant and Widely Studied Dramatic Works Form All the World’s Literatures
$12,825