Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Greatly influenced by Shakespeare

      • Lisa Klein was greatly influenced by Shakespeare with the legendary writer forming the basis for two of her most popular novels. In fact, she has asserted that her two Shakespeare derived novels were written with a copy of the Oxford English Dictionary at hand, since she did not want to use words not in common usage during Shakespeare’s time.
      www.bookseriesinorder.com › lisa-klein
  1. Although a child of the two legendary fictional Shakespeare characters is never directly seen or heard from in the original works of William Shakespeare, Klein contends that Lady Macbeth implies she has had a child when she speaks to Macbeth about nursing in Shakespeare's original play Macbeth, and therefore it is possible that Lady Macbeth did ...

  2. People also ask

  3. Lisa Klein was greatly influenced by Shakespeare with the legendary writer forming the basis for two of her most popular novels. In fact, she has asserted that her two Shakespeare derived novels were written with a copy of the Oxford English Dictionary at hand, since she did not want to use words not in common usage during Shakespeare’s time.

  4. Jun 25, 2019 · WITMORE: Lisa Klein is the author of the young adult novel Ophelia. It was first published by Bloomsbury in 2007. The book is now a movie starring Daisy Ridley as Ophelia, Naomi Watts as Gertrude, George MacKay as Hamlet, and Clive Owen as Claudius. Lisa Klein was interviewed by Barbara Bogaev.

  5. Nov 7, 2009 · What inspired you to create Albia’s character and share her story? I wanted to reimagine Shakespeares Macbeth from a female perspective, but I didn’t think I could make Lady Macbeth completely sympathetic, and anyway I wanted a younger character.

  6. In Klein’s novel, Fortinbras is as much a tyrant as Claudius. Klein continues Shakespeare’s narrative thread by having Horatio reveal the following to Ophelia: “Very soon we felt the heavy arm of his oppression as he took revenge against Denmark for seizing his father’s land” (325–326).

    • Tom Ue, FRHistS
  7. Oct 31, 2006 · In that sense, I loved how Lisa Klein took the frame of Shakespeare's play and filled in the details of Ophelia. I thought that the story she made for Ophelia was believable and it fit very well with the original Hamlet.

  8. Considering the term interfigurality as a starting point, the character of Ophelia in Lisa Klein’s homonymous novel Ophelia (2006) may not be considered to be exactly identical to the one...

  1. People also search for