There is only one author to whom the TLS devotes an issue every year: William Shakespeare. Michael Caines talks us through the latest theories, research and reviews; Ian McEwan discusses his new novel, Machines Like Me
‘Still a giddy neighbour’ – Shakespeare’s parish in the 1590s, by Geoffrey Marsh, the TLS
The Bible on the Shakespearean Stage: Cultures of interpretation in Renaissance England, edited by Thomas Fulton and Kristen Poole
Believing in Shakespeare: Studies in longing, by Claire McEachern
Religious Conversion in Early Modern English Drama, by Lieke Stelling
What Blest Genius?: The Jubilee that made Shakespeare, by Andrew McConnell Stott
Shakespeare’s Rise to Cultural Prominence: Politics, print and alteration, 1642–1700, by Emma Depledge
Shakespeare: The theatre of our world, by Peter Conrad
Machines Like Me by Ian McEwan (Cape)
A Treasure on Your Shelf, Waiting
Into The Woods
Dogs Days in the Writer’s Life
A Town Called Sue
State Secrets and Private Passions
Big Tech Is Reading Your Mind
All Those Old Familiar Places
The Gene Genie
Telling It Like It Is
Stories That Simply Unfold
Rattling The Handle On Life
A Sea-Brooding Poet
Radical Barbie
Festive Shadows and Feasts of Panackelty
Simon McBurney of Complicité - "We've always been interested in the idea of connection"
The Power of Connections
The Road To St Helena
Female Perspectives Take Centre Stage
His Biggest Role
Roman Coins And Radical Rosa Bonheur
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