The Spy of Venice: A William Shakespeare Mystery

Author:   Benet Brandreth
Publisher:   Pegasus Crime
Volume:   1
ISBN:  

9781681777986


Pages:   448
Publication Date:   07 August 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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The Spy of Venice: A William Shakespeare Mystery


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Full Product Details

Author:   Benet Brandreth
Publisher:   Pegasus Crime
Imprint:   Pegasus Crime
Volume:   1
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9781681777986


ISBN 10:   1681777983
Pages:   448
Publication Date:   07 August 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Entertaining and ebullient. The author knows his Shakespeare backwards (the Venice setting has been carefully chosen), rejoices in its wordplay, loves his allusions and has a good time with his characters. So did I. This is a clever book. On the level of storytelling alone, this is a good yarn. I also had the distinct impression that Benet Brandreth had a ball whilst writing it. An excellent read. A playful and inventive debut. The dialogue is wonderful, and Will's banter with his fellow actors sparkles. Shakespeare! The lunatic, the lover, the poet. The spy. Royal Shakespeare Company rhetoric coach Brandreth brings considerable expertise to his subject in a story rich in humor and intrigue. The dialogue and characters borrow heavily and delightfully from the Bard himself. Bravo! Between his twins' baptism in 1585 and his appearance on London theatre records in 1592, William Shakespeare's life is a mystery. Brandreth's first novel is an entertaining exploration of what Will might have been doing during those oft-debated seven 'lost years.' This series opener by the rhetoric coach to the Royal Shakespeare Company is great fun for Shakespeare fans as well as those who enjoy smart language and a grand adventure. What if William Shakespeare was an intelligence agent before he became a playwright? That's the clever premise of Brandreth's impressive first novel. Brandreth plausibly and imaginatively fills a gap in the historical record of the Bard's life.


A playful and inventive debut. The dialogue is wonderful, and Will's banter with his fellow actors sparkles. Entertaining and ebullient. The author knows his Shakespeare backwards (the Venice setting has been carefully chosen), rejoices in its wordplay, loves his allusions and has a good time with his characters. So did I. This is a clever book. On the level of storytelling alone, this is a good yarn. I also had the distinct impression that Benet Brandreth had a ball whilst writing it. An excellent read. Shakespeare! The lunatic, the lover, the poet. The spy. Royal Shakespeare Company rhetoric coach Brandreth brings considerable expertise to his subject in a story rich in humor and intrigue. The dialogue and characters borrow heavily and delightfully from the Bard himself. Bravo!


A playful and inventive debut. The dialogue is wonderful, and Will's banter with his fellow actors sparkles. This is a clever book. On the level of storytelling alone, this is a good yarn. I also had the distinct impression that Benet Brandreth had a ball whilst writing it. An excellent read. Entertaining and ebullient. The author knows his Shakespeare backwards (the Venice setting has been carefully chosen), rejoices in its wordplay, loves his allusions and has a good time with his characters. So did I. Shakespeare! The lunatic, the lover, the poet. The spy. Royal Shakespeare Company rhetoric coach Brandreth brings considerable expertise to his subject in a story rich in humor and intrigue. The dialogue and characters borrow heavily and delightfully from the Bard himself. Bravo! Between his twins' baptism in 1585 and his appearance on London theatre records in 1592, William Shakespeare's life is a mystery. Brandreth's first novel is an entertaining exploration of what Will might have been doing during those oft-debated seven 'lost years.' This series opener by the rhetoric coach to the Royal Shakespeare Company is great fun for Shakespeare fans as well as those who enjoy smart language and a grand adventure. What if William Shakespeare was an intelligence agent before he became a playwright? That's the clever premise of Brandreth's impressive first novel. Brandreth plausibly and imaginatively fills a gap in the historical record of the Bard's life.


A playful and inventive debut. The dialogue is wonderful, and Will's banter with his fellow actors sparkles. Entertaining and ebullient. The author knows his Shakespeare backwards (the Venice setting has been carefully chosen), rejoices in its wordplay, loves his allusions and has a good time with his characters. So did I. This is a clever book. On the level of storytelling alone, this is a good yarn. I also had the distinct impression that Benet Brandreth had a ball whilst writing it. An excellent read.


Author Information

Benet Brandreth is an expert on Shakespeare's language and times, the rhetoric coach to the Royal Shakespeare Company, and a writer and performer whose last one-man show was a five-star reviewed sellout at the Edinburgh Fringe and on its London Transfer. The Spy of Venice was his debut novel.

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