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The Shakespeare Stealer

(Book #1 in the The Shakespeare Stealer Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$5.59
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Book Overview

A delightful adveture full of humor and heart set in Elizabethan England! Widge is an orphan with a rare talent for shorthand. His fearsome master has just one demand: steal Shakespeare's play... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

To Steal, or Not To Steal

I read the book The Shakespeare Stealer by Gary Blackwood. It is about an orphan boy named Widge, an apprentice in the late 16th century, who has been trained to write a unique shorthand and is told by his master to copy and steal Shakespeare’s newest play, Hamlet. As he works on copying it down, he befriends the actors and when the time comes to hand over the copy he must choose between betraying his new friends, or betraying his master. This book was exciting with several duels, and it gave a good description of what the theater was like in Shakespeare’s time however, historical fiction isn’t my favorite genre.

Containing a boy who frets his hour upon the stage

Children's works of historical fiction often suffer from a common malady. If the writer is not completely comfortable with the time period they're writing about, they'll hang everything on a famous person and leave it at that. When I saw that this book was entitled, "The Shakespeare Stealer", I was sure that it would be a book in which a young boy befriended the great William Shakespeare and had an impact on history, yadda yadda yadda. But Gary Blackwood's not your everyday run-of-the-mill writer. There's a truly interesting story at the heart of this tale and a truly talented hand behind the writing. Blackwood doesn't just place his book in the past. He authenticates it by drawing you back into a fully realized historical moment in time. The result is a whole lot of fun and a book that I'll be shoving into the hands of any kid forced to read something realisitic for a book report. Widge received his odd name when the mistress of an orphanage took one look at him as a babe and said, "Och, the poor little pigwidgeon" (thereby surprising anybody who thought that J.K. Rowling had made up the name). Since birth the boy has been either an orphan or a lowly apprentice. He was put under the thumb of one Dr. Bright when he was seven, and through this master he learned a form of shorthand that no one else in the world knew. Such a talent is bound to attract interest, however, and at the age of fourteen Widge is bought by a man who needs the boy's talents professionally. Sent to London, Widge is told to watch a performance of Hamlet and take down every word. A series of small mishaps land him not in the audience, however, but as a member of the acting troupe. Now the boy who never had a family must learn about courage, trust, and friendship from a group of people who prance about in silly clothes all day. The only question is, will his old master give him up so easily? The book plunges you headfirst into the late 1500s/early 1600s without further ado. Reading Blackwood, you become acutely aware of just how dirty, dank, and smelly England was during that time. Because Widge is such a greenhorn to the sophistications of London, Blackwood has a perfect excuse for explaining everything. Our hero doesn't understand the presence of drainage ditches alongside busy streets, or how to fence, or what a duel constitutes, so kids can learn alongside him. What was most impressive in my eyes, though, was Blackwood's command of language. Poorly written novels set during Elizabethan England like to throw around a lot of "thees", "thys" and "thous" for good measure. Widge, for his part, is from Yorkshire, so his words and accent are different from even those Londoners he comes to join. The book remains readable for 9-year-olds but also feels authentically Shakespearean. No mean task. At its heart, the book is really about the beauty of performing on a stage. If you know any kid that's lured time and again to the glory of the limelight, they'll

The Shakespeare Stealer

I'm Bari Ann and an intermediate reader. I thought 'The Shakespeare Stealer' was truly fabulous! It's about an orphan named Widge, living in England in Shakespeare's time. He unwillingly is swept up into adventure and choices. No one is who they seem to be, and the plot is deep and twisting. I couldn't put this book down! It's a wonderful read.

A good old romp through old England

I really recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in theater or just likes a fun book!

This book is full of surprises!

I stayed up all night finishing this book-- 3 times! It started out exciting and got right into the action. It took time to have funny parts, too, though. I had to cover my mouth so I wouldn't wake my family up laughing! It increased my intrest in Shakespear and Elizabethen england and I recently persuaded my teacher to have us do a staged reading of A MID-SUMMER NIGHTS DREAM.

The Shakespeare Stealer Mentions in Our Blog

The Shakespeare Stealer in All the World's a Stage: Shakespeare-Related Reads for All Ages
All the World's a Stage: Shakespeare-Related Reads for All Ages
Published by Ashly Moore Sheldon • July 17, 2020
With the cancelation of so many of our summer adventures, we are relying on literature to take us where we want to go. This week, a mini Shakespeare Festival with reads for all ages!
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