Hamlet
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Hamlet

3.99 of 5 stars 3.99  ·  rating details  ·  274,994 ratings  ·  4,114 reviews
Each edition includes: • Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play

• Full explanatory notes conveniently placed on pages_facing the text of the play

• Scene-by-scene plot summaries

• A key to famous lines and phrases

• An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language

• An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing_a modern perspective on the...more
Paperback, 400 pages
Published July 27th 2004 by Simon & Schuster (first published 1602)
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Madeline
Hamlet, abridged:

GHOST/DAD: Hamlet, your uncle killed me and married your mom. I want vengeance, so best get to murdering, plzthnx.

HAMLET: EEK!

OPHELIA: Hamlet, are you okay?

HAMLET: Get away from me, skankwhore!

OPHELIA: WTF? *goes from zero to crazy like that*

GERTRUDE: Kid, you need therapy.

HAMLET: And you need to be less of AN ADULTEROUS WHORE!

POLONIUS: OMG so rude!

HAMLET: Eavesdropping? I KEEL YOU!

*play goes on hold while Hamlet talks to skeletons*

LAERTES: You killed my dad and drove my sis...more
Steve aka Sckenda
Nov 28, 2012 Steve aka Sckenda rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Lovers of Language; Searchers for Themselves
Recommended to Steve aka Sckenda by: Ms. McFarland
“When such a spacious mirror’s set before him, He needs must see himself.” Shakespeare

This play is a mirror. I met Hamlet in 12th grade English, and I was told that he was a man who could not make up his mind and failed to fulfill his promise to timely avenge his father's death. I was also told that Freud said that Hamlet was really Oedipus, in love with his mother and at war with the father figure. No thanks.

Here is the only plot detail necessary for you to understand my limited review. In Act...more
Jason
“Madness in great ones must not unwatch’d go.”

I don’t know what to say about Hamlet. I could go on about how it is a story of madness and revenge. I could talk about the bonds of family loyalty, the sacrifices of love, the breaches of trust and their deleterious effects on the psyche. But this is old news—Hamlet has been around for over four hundred years. What could I possibly say that hasn’t already been said?

When my wife saw I was reading Shakespeare, her snippy comment went something like, “...more
Keely
Shakespeare is an adept poet and master of the language. He layers on jokes, puns, and references everywhere. He has a massive output of work, and a number of different plots. When we compare him to other authors, it is difficult to find anyone who stacks up--but then, we're often comparing him to the wrong people.

Shakespeare didn't write books or pamphlets or epics, he wrote plays: short pieces of drama that were meant to be fast-paced and exciting. That they are mainly experienced today as bou...more
Paul
The Skinhead Hamlet - Shakespeare's play translated into modern English. By Richard Curtis. Yes, that Richard Curtis!

Note : those offended by the F word - LOOK AWAY NOW! And Georgia, if you've stumbled on this review by your funny old dad - this is ANOTHER Paul Bryant. Not me!

*********

ACT I
SCENE I
The Battlements of Elsinore Castle.

[Enter HAMLET, followed by GHOST:]

GHOST: Oi! Mush!

HAMLET: Yer?

GHOST: I was fucked!

[Exit GHOST:]

HAMLET: O Fuck.

[Exit HAMLET:]

SCENE II
The Throneroom.

[Enter KING...more
Aubrey
I first encountered Hamlet in comic book form, alongside many other Shakespeare plays portrayed with fantastical characters in all shades, poses, and degrees of perverseness. The strongest memory from that time consists of the titular character, blonde head posing with an innocent expression between a hawk and a handsaw. Some time later I was intrigued to learn that Shakespeare himself had performed in productions as the infamous ghost. Nothing else of his acting career stayed in my brain, which...more
Ian Graye
A Young Lawyer’s Guide to "Hamlet":

Head Note

Something is rotten in the state of Denmark – Young Hamlet still mourns his father’s death – doesn’t like King Claudius marrying his mother, Queen Gertrude, so soon

Ophelia's brother, Laertes, warns her not to fall in love with Young Hamlet - her father Polonius fears she will be hurt

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern investigate Young Hamlet’s strange behavior – Polonius believes he loves Ophelia

Ghost of Hamlet tells Young Hamlet he was poisoned by King Cla...more
Caris
THIS BOOK IS ABOUT GO FUCK YOURSELF.
Manny
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Bettie
CELEBRITY DEATH MATCH REVIEW

HAMLET V JANE EYRE

From today's Telegraph:

A diary has been found by an eminent archaeologist working at the site of Thornfield Hall. This crumbling tome is purportedly written by a certain Mrs Rochester formerly known as Ophelia, and within those pages there is enough circumstance to shame most of today's adventure writers who can rarely be relied upon to conjure up such an exciting plot-line.

Fact is surely stranger than fiction.

Police in Denmark were notified and upo...more
Chiara Pagliochini

Signore e signori, essendo oggi una domenica particolarmente stanca, ho deciso di fare una cosa un po’ diversa dal mio solito e di coinvolgervi in un piccolo esperimento sociale. L’esperimento è volto a dimostrare che ognuno di noi ha almeno una conoscenza empirica di base del signor Billy Shakespeare e delle sue opere. Come possiamo citare a memoria frasi della Bibbia senza averla mai letta per intero, come citiamo la Divina Commedia o le poesie che abbiamo imparato alle elementari, così siamo...more
Henry Avila
Hamlet a kindly man, and longtime student(over ten years), at the University of Wittenberg,Germany. But his carefree life is destroyed, when his father dies suddenly.Having the misfortune to be a Prince of Denmark.Duty demands, going back to the royal palace. At Elsinore, overlooking the Baltic Sea,which controls its entrance.The new King his uncle, has married Hamlet's mother ,the Queen! And thus gaining the throne, just a month after the King's funeral.The ruler was an elective office then.Mor...more
Bettie
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Dina Nabil
عندما تقلب فى اوراق هاملت شكسبير تطوف حولك عشرات الاشباح الى جانب شبح والد هاملت بزيه الحربى مشيرا الى ابنه ان يتبعه

ترى شبح يوسف شاهين راميا كرسى على الجمهور هاتفا "الانتقاااام" يليه صرخته الشهيره قفشتهااا

حتى شبح شخصية سميحة ايوب فى "سكة السلامة" شارحا كيف ان رواية هاملت روايه تربويه من الطراز الاول لان والدته قد "هاملت" فى تربيه ابنها فجن

شبح ذلك القارئ الصغير او حديث العهد بالقراءة يقرأ و يحملق فى جمل هاملت ليصل الى السطر الذى يشدو فيه "اكون او لا اكون..تلك هى المعضلة" فتنفرج اساريره محدثا ذاته
...more
Elizabeth
I read most of this on a plane last night. There is something quietly magical about closing your ears to outside distractions and reading under a small light while people all around you sleep or stare at computer screens or otherwise pretend that they are also alone in this small, tight space. We ignore each other as much as possible as a courtesy. It isn't a time to share a story with the stranger next to you; it isn't polite to get loudly drunk. It's quiet, no cell phones (yet), and dark, and...more
Sandy Tjan
For the Celebrity Death Match Review Tournament, Hamlet vs Winnie-the-Pooh



Sometimes Winnie-the-Pooh likes a game of some sort
when he comes downstairs, and sometimes he likes to sit
quietly in front of the fire and listen to a story. This eve-
ning—
"What about a story?" said Christopher Robin.
"What about a story?" I said.
"Could you very sweetly tell Winnie-the-Pooh one?"
"I suppose I could," I said. "What sort of stories does
he like?"
"About himself. Because he's that sort of Bear."
"...more
Jeanette
Final body count = 8

Got the hots for your sister-in-law? Wanna be king? Just bump off your brother and marry his wife! Then your nephew will be your stepson, but you will call him "cousin." Very soon, you and everyone around you will be dead, and some Norwegian dude will plop his dimply butt in your throne.

Mariel
Oct 07, 2011 Mariel rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone is already born knowing it
Recommended to Mariel by: probably before I was even born
Celebrity Death Match tournament review versus The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. (Once I thought I was out...) Edit- Whoops accidental alternative pairing! It was supposed to be MACBETH versus Sherlock. Oh well, those wins are givens anyway.
"To do anything, is there even a point? To die, to eat and sleep, is that all there is? Fuck. No, to sleep, to dream, to fuck, there it all goes down the fucking toilet. Bitches, liars and whores. Assholes, fucktards and sons of bitches. I'm sick of it all...more
Anastasia
Ma che cos'ho che non va.

Ma porca miseria, se continua così comincerò a credere alla possibilità che il mio DNA sia stato alterato, per cui non sono come il resto dei lettori. Non so, magari ho un cromosoma che mi sballa tutto e non mi permette di impazzire per Shakespeare come fa il resto del mondo. Se è veramente così, dovrò dimenticare l'educazione e dirne tante a mamma e papà.
Non è che l'Amleto non mi sia piaciuto, è che, appunto, non sono riuscita ad innamorarmene, come vedo che accade a p...more
Trevor
Feb 09, 2008 Trevor rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: humans
Shelves: literature
I’ve always meant to talk to my mate George about Hamlet and I guess this is as good an opportunity to do so as any.

There are different things I would say to different people about Hamlet – and as this is the near perfect play I guess there ought to be many and various things one could say about it.

The oddest thing about Hamlet is that people always tend to say the same thing – they always say, “Oh yes, Hamlet, the man who hesitates”. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I don’t believe i...more
Marvin
Written for the Celebrity Death Match Review Tournament

Bout: Hamlet vs. To Kill a Mockingbird

Atticus Finch waited quietly in front of the sheriff's office. The word as out that a vigilante mob would attempt to take his client out of the jail and lynch him. Atticus was sipping his lemonade when he heard a rustle in the bushes.

"Who is that." He shouted.

"It's just me." replied Scout.

"Why Scout. What are you doing here. You should be in bed. This is no place for you."

"I was worried. Why do you have...more
Kelly
May 25, 2007 Kelly rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone. Even if you don't like Shakespeare. It's necessary.
I do not know how I would get by in my other literary experiences without knowing this play at at least the moderate level that I do. There are countless other books (Ulysses being the first that comes to mind) that reference it or use it as a major theme, and I think I would have missed out on a lot if I didn't have this in my arsenal.

I love the "piece of work is man" speech so much. And "rogue and peasant slave".

I am obviously not qualified to really review Hamlet. And besides, it's Hamlet, wh...more
TD


**Spoilers**(but really, come on...)

Although written prior (and this being a rather simplistic idea) I can't help but think of 'Hamlet' as providing a sequel to' King Lear'; the final lines of the later all but presaging the thematic thrust of the earlier play (if you'll permit me a 'back to the future' moment):

The weight of this sad time we must obey,
Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say.
The oldest hath borne most: we that are young
Shall never see so much, nor live so long.


If in 'King Le...more
Simona Bartolotta
"O Amleto, mi hai spaccato il cuore."

O sono io che in questo periodo sto sviluppando un folle amore per il teatro, o è che questo Amleto mi ha davvero toccato l'anima.
Da amare per la profonda disperazione che emerge dai suoi versi, una disperazione cieca, nera come l'oblio, ma pur sempre velata d'ironia; per l'intensità dei sentimenti dei personaggi, per la loro forza e la loro deboleazza, e per la loro storia, storia di intrighi, peccati, vendette: ed infine per la loro stessa umanità, per la l...more
Brad
Is there a better artistic expression of death's myriad manifestations than Shakespeare's Hamlet? I say no. In my counter-factual universe I see William Shakespeare as a Lieutenant at the First Somme. Imagine the war poetry that Shakespeare could have written. Perhaps one such war sonnet would have gone something like this:

My subaltern’s eyes will ne’er again see the sun,
Exposed hearts are more red than whores lips are red;
If we go o’er the top we are sure to face the gun;
And those caught on...more
Dmitry
Oct 11, 2007 Dmitry rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: you
Just taking a stab here. Feel free to comment or dismiss.

I'd like to suggest that "Hamlet" was the first work of "high" or "serious" literature, by which I mean the first publically disseminated text written in a common language that was difficult for its contemporary audience (as opposed to, for example, texts like DaVinci's notebooks, written in code, Thomas Acquinas's "Summa Theologica," written in Church Latin, and texts like "The Bible," or "The Iliad" that became difficult over time.)

I thi...more
Bill  Kerwin

I don't really have any important insights to share from this last of god-knows-how-many readings, but this time through I was really struck by: 1) what a damn fine piece of stagecraft this is, from the suspenseful, moody opening on the castle battlements to the solemn dead march carrying the prince offstage, and 2) how Shakespeare seems to want Hamlet's personality--particularly the wellsprings of his actions (and lack of action)--to remain an enigma, and that he achieves this by infusing the c...more
Rebecca
Exposes the ultimate conclusion of female passivity as death. However, I'm suspicious of Ophelia's fate. How did Gertrude know she was singing? That bitch must have been witness. At least. ;)

*engages angry mob for justice*

'Angry Mob for Justice' is gonna be the name of my organisation.

*nods*
Katie Lawrence
This book was definitely a violent book. It starts off with the night guards seeing what appears to be a ghost. Hamlet comes and talks to the ghost. It tells him to get revenge and kill his uncle. The ghost says that Hamlet's uncle killed his father. Then Hamlet's mother and uncle had an affair and then got married. This causes Hamlet to start acting crazy. Hamlet is in love with Ophelia, who has a father named Polonius and a brother named Laertes. Hamlet goes to talk to his mother about her beh...more
Patille Madaghjian
I knew the famous quote "To be or not to be" before I even read Hamlet. That's how famous it is; but when I actually read it, I realized why it had such a reputation. To think that Shakespeare had ideas that included Marxism and the Oedipus complex, which are so ahead of his time, is shocking!
The character who really drew my attention was Ophelia. I am a person who loves romantic stories, but this play is a tragedy and Ophelia ends up committing suicide. I was really interested in her because s...more
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topics  posts  views  last activity   
The best film version 79 341 May 18, 2013 01:53am  
Dithering 1 22 Apr 29, 2013 07:43pm  
Hamlet's relationship with his mother 16 100 Mar 11, 2013 05:02am  
Goodreads Librari...: Please add page numbers 10 30 Feb 28, 2013 11:39am  
“...and you thought your life was crazy.” 6 64 Feb 06, 2013 01:10pm  
Infinite Jest – D...: Hamlet 4 37 Dec 29, 2012 08:37am  
Hamlet (Paperback)
Hamlet (Paperback)
Hamlet (Paperback)
Hamlet (Paperback)
Hamlet (New Folger Library)

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William Shakespeare (baptised 26 April 1564) was an English poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "The Bard"). His surviving works consist of 38 plays, 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems, and several other poems. His plays have been tr...more
More about William Shakespeare...
Romeo and Juliet Macbeth A Midsummer Night's Dream Othello Much Ado About Nothing

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“This above all: to thine own self be true,
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.”
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“Doubt thou the stars are fire;
Doubt that the sun doth move;
Doubt truth to be a liar;
But never doubt I love.”
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