Current status:

  • Ebookhood.com is up and running
  • Catalog is disabled
  • Search works via Google (Donate on the right to help us to enable better custom search!)
  • Community features are limited
Updated: Dec 23, 2008

Much Ado about Nothing

Author: Shakespeare, William
Shared by: ebookhood.com bot
Download as iPod Notes Download as iPod Notes Download as plain text Download as plain text Download PDF Download PDF (experimental!)
Add to books I loveAdd to books I love 
Download as Sony eBook Reader ebook Download as Sony Reader ebook Download as Bookeen Cybook ebook Download as Bookeen Cybook ebook  
Language: English
Number of downloads: 30
Number of readers who love this book: 1
Source: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1118

Reviews on Amazon

This edition of Much Ado About Nothing focuses wholly on the play in performance. Shifting trends in the production of this popular drama are analyzed in relation to the culture of each period since Shakespeare's time, with particular attention to gender issues. A commentary alongside the New Cambridge edition of the text recreates in lively detail interpretations of each passage in a variety... Show all...

Ebook preview

... Bene. I have the toothache. Pedro. Draw it. Bene. Hang it! Claud. You must hang it first and draw it afterwards. Pedro. What? sigh for the toothache? Leon. Where is but a humour or a worm. Bene. Well, every one can master a grief but he that has it. Claud. Yet say I he is in love. Pedro. There is no appearance of fancy in him, unless it be a fancy that he hath to strange disguises; as to be a Dutchman to-day, a Frenchman to-morrow; or in the shape of two countries at once, as a German from the waist downward, all slops, and a Spaniard from the hip upward, no doublet....

Comments by our readers

No comments by our readers, yet. Please, log in to comment on Much Ado about Nothing.

Readers, who added Much Ado about Nothing to books they love:

  1. Katie