The Works of William Shakespeare [Cambridge Edition] [Vol. 1 of 9] by Shakespeare

(6 User reviews)   1528
By Penelope Smirnov Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - Prized Reads
Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616
English
Okay, so you know how everyone says Shakespeare is tough to read? I used to think that too, until I picked up this specific edition. It's the Cambridge Edition, Volume 1, and it's basically the gold standard for people who want to see what Shakespeare actually wrote, without all the guesses and updates from people centuries later. The big mystery here isn't a whodunit—it's more like, 'What did the man himself actually put on the page?' We've heard so many stories from those old-timey editions that made changes, but this one goes back to the original old books they printed when Shakespeare was still alive. It’s amazing—suddenly, all those weird lines in *The Two Gentlemen of Verona* and *The Taming of the Shrew* make a whole lot more sense. You get to see language before editors 'cleaned it up,' and it's wild. The conflict is on every page: do I read the 'normal' version I know, or do I trust the historical evidence in this Cambridge text? Trust me, if you're the type who loves getting lost in the how-and-why of history, or if you just want to surprise your friends with super authentic Shakespeare quotes, this is a total cool-people-dinner-party must-have. It feels like sneaking into a secret club where the password is 'we have the real copies.'
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So I finally grabbed a copy of The Works of William Shakespeare [Cambridge Edition] [Vol. 1 of 9], thinking it would be another dust-collector. I was so wrong. This isn't just a book; it's a time machine with footnotes.

The Story

Technically, you’ve heard it all before: boy meets girl, masks, mistaken identity, maybe a shipwreck. But the 'story' here is really *how we got to read Shakespeare in the first place*. Up until the late 1800s, publishers just made up their own versions. Then these clever dudes from Cambridge University went back to the first folios and quartos (the actual books from Shakespeare's day) and said, 'Hey, maybe the author himself knew how to improve a line?' So this version is like a clean snapshot—they didn't change a single word unless the original manuscript forced them to. The 'conflict' is the sneaky battle between just hearing the movie version and reading what truly came off his quill pen.

Why You Should Read It

I call this the Architect's Blueprint edition. You know those movies where special effects run wild but the story makes no sense? Shakespeare has had that happen to his text for hundreds of years. When you read the Cambridge notes, you suddenly catch inside jokes and bits of his own soul peeking through the cracks. For example, take the act of turning an old manuscript into this bound paper—it’s totally a team effort. You see where these editors chose which older book to trust, and you feel like you’re a detective. Plus, the introductions are epic. They take this super straightforward stand against fancy, scholarly guesswork. Honestly, it’s magnetic, like sitting in a pub with a really informal academic.

Final Verdict

This is perfect for: People with only a passing interest in Shakespeare but a huge crush on 'how we know what we know.' If you hate feeling like one version of a play died when the directors got involved, or if you just like having the *real* copy of an famous line to show off to your know-it-all friend, get Volume 1. But also, if you're scared of dense footnotes, pick it up anyway because they won't let you trip on language. However, if you just want to grab any book and zoom through pure story and skip to the sex and fighting, you’d get annoyed with how much it kicks you into the literature weeds. Otherwise, do it. Stop acting like Shakespeare is homework—steal your fun right out of the historical pages.



🔖 Open Access

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David Lopez
2 months ago

As a professional in this niche, the historical context mentioned in the early chapters is quite enlightening. Thanks for making such a high-quality version available.

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