HOW TO THINK LIKE SHAKESPEARE: LESSONS FROM A RENAISSANCE EDUCATION By Scott Newstok

Scott Newstok’s slim book celebrates Shakespeare and his various works. Newstok organizes his book around topics and then manages to find new insights (at least new to me) about what the Bard was thinking about.

In addition, Newstok folds in writings of writers like Borges, Hunter S. Thompson, Abraham Lincoln, Elizabeth Bishop, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Faulkner depending on the subject of each chapter. Are you a Shakespeare fan? GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

What’s Past Is Prologue ix

1 Of Thinking 1

2 Of Ends 13

3 Of Craft 25

4 Of Fit 37

5 Of Place 47

6 Of Attention 55

7 Of Technology 63

8 Of Imitation 73

9 Of Exercises 85

10 Of Conversation 97

11 Of Stock 107

12 Of Constraint 119

13 Of Making 131

14 Of Freedom 141

Kinsmen of the Shelf 153

Thanks and Thanks 165

Index 173

14 thoughts on “HOW TO THINK LIKE SHAKESPEARE: LESSONS FROM A RENAISSANCE EDUCATION By Scott Newstok

  1. Jerry House

    I do like Shakespeare. Nothing can top KING LEAR, in my humble opinion. I am not able to think like Shakespeare, but I can write like him, in a way — I’m able to spell my last name a gazillion different ways. — Jerry Howze

    Reply
  2. Jeff Meyerson

    I like Shakespeare too, though I haven’t read all of them by any means. (I got bogged down in the middle of the history plays.) We’ve seen many on Broadway, in London, even in Stratford on Avon. MEASURE FOR MEASURE remains a favorite, along with HAMLET and a couple of others.

    Reply
  3. Prashant C. Trikannad

    George, I have only read Shakespeare’s works in passages or in abridged versions. Not the best way to go about it. But I do intend to read my grandfather’s old hardback of the bard’s twelve works in future. It’s been on my mind for a very long time.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Prashant, many of Shakespeare’s plays have been turned into movies. I like to read a Shakespeare play and then watch a movie version of it. It’s fun to see the words come to life!

      Reply
  4. wolf

    At school I envied my friends who had English as their second foreign language (the first one was French), they would read Skakespeare’s works while I had to read thousands of years old stuff in Latin.
    I only started learning English later and then I was more into “new” stuff like SF.
    Much later I read some but mainly watched films (movies for you …) like McBeth and Hamlet – but of course in German translations.
    But I don’t think I could learn to think (pun intended) like Shakespeare.

    Reply

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