Somehow yesterday was just an absolutely phenomenal day on Hamlet Twitter. #hamlettwt
Somehow yesterday was just an absolutely phenomenal day on Hamlet Twitter. #hamlettwt
Decided to reread a classic and I must say, Hamlet is probably my favourite from Shakespeare 👌🏾Some bits that stood out to me were: “A man may fish with the word that hath eat of a king, and eat of the fish that hath fed of that worm” by Hamlet to the King and “Tis in my memory lock‘d, and you yourself shall keep the key of it” by Ophelia to Laertes.
3✨One of my high school reads I wanted to try again. I understand so much more reading it this time around. While it might be remembering discussions with my high school peers. I want to say it‘s my maturity in reading. Read for #Roll100 @PuddleJumper
I‘m just putting this aside for a while. I have a few new books I‘ve been waiting for. I‘ll come back to this later.
#NewYearNewBooks
#InvolvesPoison
@Eggs
@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
“Murder most foul ...“
Summary of Act 2 scene 1:
Ophelia: Dad, Hamlet is acting crazy.
Polonium: oh no, I must have given you some bad advice. Good thing I just finished giving parenting advice to Reynaldo so I can devote some time to telling the king what to do about Hamlet. Man, but i can be a blow-hard sometimes!
"By heaven, it is as proper to our age
To cast beyond ourselves in our opinions
As it is common for the younger sort
To lack discretion."
?
After reading O‘Farrell‘s Hamnet last year I decided it was time to try re-reading Shakespeare, & Hamlet seemed the obv choice bc of 1) O‘s book, and 2) I've read it and enjoyed it in the past.
In any case, some of these more... throwaway? passages are resonating more with me this time, such as above. Maybe it's O‘s fault, but maybe there's some conflicted anguish-S railing against fate, telling himself to get over grief-that I didn't feel before?
Hamlet could have used #therapy
#MayMontage
@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
This is a book I had to read for class and personally I think there are better works out there, I‘m more of a midsummer nights dream girlie.
I had to read this for my Shakespeare class this semester. I honestly thought I would hate this class and everything I have to read for it, but i love my professor and honestly this play didn‘t suck too bad. It was a pretty fast and painless read. I will say hamlet was kinda funny but he was also a piss baby who needed to shut up at times. Also the lumineers hyped Ophelia up way too much.
#Scarathlon #TeamSlaughter #DailyPhotoPrompt #Day20 #Murder
“Murder most foul, as in the best it is / But this most foul, strange and unnatural.”
On the first day of the year, my 11th-grade English teacher (who was from Budapest) told us the story about how she escaped the country during the Hungarian revolution in 1956 with nothing in her backpack but a change of clothes and a copy of “Hamlet.” That woman was brilliant and terrifying and I didn‘t fully appreciate her until many years later. She is gone now, but I would feel obligated to have Shakespeare on the table in her honor.
I read this for class and I loved it. This play was so much more interesting than the last one I read. I also watched the play and wow! The acting was incredible. There were so many scenes that, when I had read it, did not think they would be acted like that. The actors really brought the play to life. Reading/watching “Hamlet” made me want to read another one of Shakespeare‘s plays so I could have a more in-depth knowledge when I watch it.
After reading the wonderful Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell, I decided to reread Shakespeare's Hamlet. What struck me is the incredible number of common English phrases that had come from this work.
#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
4⭐ I thought that hamlet would be my all time favourite shakesperean play, but it isn't. I don't know if it's because I had really high hopes for it or what, but I didn't like it as much as his other plays. It was good and kept me interested, but it have any effect one by the end. I liked some quotes and some parts, but it wasn't how I expected it you know?
1. For school( A Portrait of the artist - Hamlet - Little women ) for fun( Luna and the lie - Harry potter and the Goblet of fire ) I'm working on all of these together, so I didn't finish them during the weekend, but Hamlet is close to done.
2.I use Goodreads and storyGraph
3. The Maze runner
@rachelsbrittain #weekendreads
Hamlet: Oh God! God! How weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable Seem to me all the uses of this world. Fie on ‘t! Ah fie! ‘tis an unweeded garden, That grows to seed; things rank and gross in nature Possess it merely.
I don‘t know why I‘m so determined to try and get through all of Shakespeare‘s works. I really don‘t like reading them, and when it comes to doing a post, they‘re the most low effort ones ever. I really feel like I should make an effort to find the plays on YouTube or something.
How do you feel about Hamlet?
@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
@Eggs
#JulyJourneys
Day 21 - #Castle
Krongborn Castle in Denmark, the house of Hamlet ❤
After reading the wonderful book #Hamnet, My son Adam & I thought we‘d read some Shakespeare!!
I bought these as a way to introduce myself and my grandkids to Shakespeare.
We‘ve had fun reading aloud together, alternating pages!
📚😂🥳 🎭 📚
Shakespeare 16 Books Childrens Story Collection Set By Tony Ross https://smile.amazon.com/dp/1408313057/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_X2ZAHGVBM6V53...
This American Life has been highlighting their best episodes for their 25th anniversary. I was happy to see they included one of my very favorite listening experiences ever, Act V. It‘s about a group of prisoners performing Hamlet. I‘m listening to it again tonight for #NonFictionNovember
https://www.thisamericanlife.org/218/act-v
#ThoughtfulThursday is a bit late today. Sorry, Littens!
🍭Milky Way & Candy Corn
🎞 HUSH 😳😳😳
🕯 “By the prickling of my thumbs, Something Wicked this way comes...” from Hamlet.
⭐️Everyone welcome to play! Tagging some to get it started: @TheSpineView @Eggs @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @Sace @FantasyChick @BayouGirl85 @ElizaMarie @Andrew65 @TheBookHippie @katy4peas @SamAnne @Klou @Librarybelle @NeedsMoreBooks
Engaging in #WilliamShakespeare is definitely more fun when David Tennant is involved! I also love Midsummer night‘s dream and The Tempest. #augustauthors
Polonius is portrayed as #absentminded in Hamlet by #WilliamShakespeare
#aboutaugust
#augustauthors @OriginalCyn620 @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
🎥🎭 I‘ve read the play, seen the play, worked on the play and watched a few film adaptations—so you would I would be a rather jaded critic. TBH, even though this BBC production stars David Tennet (as Hamlet) and Patrick Strewart (as Claudius), I was having a few misgivings with the 20th c. setting, a few missing lines, and the fight choreography BUT in the end I was fully engaged... And not gonna lie, for first time ever (re Hamlet), crying 😭
My junior high school teacher, Mrs. Z. valiantly tried to lead us through Hamlet but we were all defeated... And yet this was the first play of Shakespeare‘s that I read and, it would become the one I‘ve seen and studied must often. For many years, I held the hypothesis that your first Shakespeare would be your favorite Shakespeare because you would know it best!
I won‘t be reading this copy from the ‘70s though, but rather the 2012 Folger ed. 🎭
Doubt thou the stars are fire;
Doubt that the sun doth move;
I always like to see this many words all together. Clearly, William Shakespeare mastered the art of thinking whatever you want, putting it to paper with dreamy consistency. It is the art of saying as much as possible, which makes him the ultimate philosopher. He just gets in the flow of his discourse and the words take on a life of their own. The art of abstract discourse is partly the secret behind all this, but there is much more going on.
#7days7books that had an impact on me - day 7
This should shock no one!!!
#Shakespeare #Hamlet #shakespearereadalong
“Here‘s your diploma, congratulations, by the way, you can now speak to ghosts, good luck in life!” #shakespearelogic
Not only did I finish a book during #readathon (I'm usually way too distracted seeing what everyone else is reading and being a general procrastinator) but I also found a new favourite insult. "Go pray on some garbage". Perfect.
Alright #readathon, let's do this! First up, Hamlet. Got my coffee, got my cat, got a comfy chair and the birbs outside doing their thing. Yes, good.