My The Shakespeare Collectables and Game tour

2016 is the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death, and like last year’s 450th  anniversary of his birth, we are seeing a burst of Shakespeare related book creativity. I thought mine would be ready, but sadly it’s not. But, perhaps it would be better to wait, and let the commotion die down a bit.

Not only are new books coming out like, Shakespeare and the Stuff of Life: Treasures from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, due out April 21 and, Worlds Elsewhere, Journeys around Shakespeare’s Globe, no release date,  so too is the book that started them all. This year the Folger Library is hosting a First Folio tour. Thankfully one of the stops is here in Reno, so I will get to see one up close!

As much as we scholars and bibliophiles are thrilled to see more Shakespeare related work appear in print, we must admit, not everyone likes to read. With this in mind, I thought I would share some non-book items that are sure to delight Bard lovers everywhere.

I’ll call this list

The Shakespeare Collectables and Game tour

I got mine from Amazon
I got mine from Amazon

If you are anything like me, books about Shakespeare are not enough. Besides Shakespeare posters my office holds many nerdy Shakespeare related items. One of my favorite toys is Shakespeare himself. What better inspiration is there to have when writing about his plays?

From Celebriducks.com
From Celebriducks.com

If having the Bard stare at you while writing sounds intimidating, you may want to go for this cute guy. Yes, he is a duck and like all good ducks, is not prone to intimidation. On the other hand, he looks like a cross between Freud and Shakespeare, so you may want to choose your words carefully while he’s around.

Thank you Amazon for keeping these in stock!
Thank you Amazon for keeping these in stock!

Then there are these, and yes I have a box, just in case you give yourself a paper cut. Once, I cut myself while reading Macbeth. Who knew I had so much blood in me? Besides stemming a tide of blood these bandages (or plasters) will teach you how to curse in poetic language.

From The Birthplace Trust Foundation
From The Birthplace Trust Foundation

As I write this, I’ve got a pot of cinnamon tea at my side. If you find inspiration in a cup too then you may enjoy this lovely tea pot depicting the front of Anne Hathaway’s house courtesy of the Birthplace Trust Foundation gift shop.

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My favorite Shakespeare related item from the Birthplace Trust Foundation is this First Folio tea towel. It will be my first 2016 Shakespeare celebration gift to myself. And the second Shakespeare related kitchen item; the first is Shakespeare refrigerator poetry. It’s fun to play with while waiting for water to boil. But sadly, it’s taught me that I’m a better cook than poet.

Games, games, games! If you like games or know someone who spends way to much time playing Angry Birds, I think you may find one or two of these to your liking.

I hope one of the pieces is a quill
I hope one of the pieces is a quill

Coming out in October is the Stafford-upon-Avon Monopoly set! Yes, the people voted and Shakespeare’s hometown won! Cheers to them. I collect Monopoly sets and hope to add this one to my collection (hint, hint).

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If you find you cannot wait until October, there is the Shakespeare Board game. I just recently heard about it and haven’t played but have heard only good things about it. This game may be a fine way to introduce Shakespeare to your friends and family.

elsinore

Do you like video games? Elsinore is a new game, coming out sometime this summer. It is video game for the younger crowd. Here you get a chance to change the course history. What makes this unique and interesting is that it’s played from Ophelia’s perspective. This allows the otherwise helpless girl to take charge and set things right. You can see the trailer here: Elsinore.

This may appeal to the little ones one your list. I was never one for cut out dolls, but this is tempting.. Please don’t repeat that to anyone.

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If you’ve seen an Shakespeare related item you want to share or find you must have, let us know. I have no doubt in the weeks to come, we will see more and more collectables offered as part of the 400th year celebration! Let the fun begin!

Much ado about the Case of the missing skull

Inscription thought to be commissioned by Shakespeare himself
Inscription thought to be commissioned by Shakespeare himself

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Have you heard about the latest Shakespeare mystery? Someone has stolen his skull! There is a very real possibility that somewhere, someone is in possession of the beloved poet’s head and is keeping it a secret. Or, maybe not. There may be much ado about nothing. Let’s start from the beginning.

Argosy, an early 19th century English magazine, now considered to be the first published collection of “pulp fiction”, is our starting point or should I say reference point for the case of the missing skull. Here too we have a slight mystery on our hands, as the date of the magazine’s first issue is in question. Some Internet sites say it started in December of 1882, yet a bound collection of some of its earliest stories titled, Argosy Volume 28, notes that the stories are from 1879. And if this is volume VIII, wouldn’t this suggest even an early date of publication? But no matter, what is important is that at some point in history, one of the stories published in Argosy was a story titled, “How Shakespeare’s Skull was stolen” authored by A Warwickshire Man. The story is part of the Volume 28 collection, which is still in print today. I read it thanks to Google Books, though it is such a mess of a story that I don’t recommend you bother.

The story is narrated from a first person’s perspective. One man retells a tale he was told as well as readings he got from a diary. As a piece of fiction goes it’s a little messy but readable, but from a historical account may leave the reader with a lot of unanswered questions and some major plot holes. If it is to be believed, a young brash and arrogant doctor, Frank Chambers, pays two well-known grave robbers to dig up Shakespeare’s skull, because, well, why not! After all the doctor already had one skull and felt he needed a second “to bear him company; the poor fellow finds it unked here o’nights since he was swinging free and easy on Mappleborough Green”. So it seems the doctor had the skull of a hanged man and wanted to balance that out with a poet. Doesn’t sound like a likely pair for bookends to me.

The story continues as slapstick comedy; the two grave robbers set out dig up Shakespeare, but because they rely on a local Stratford maid who cannot read, and has never heard of William Shakespeare, ends up digging up the wrong skull. (if this reminds you of the brain stealing scene in Young Frankenstein, you are not alone) After being admonished by Chambers, the pair sets out again, key to the Church in hand, and finally steals away with the right skull.

As I said, as a piece of fiction it’s a little messy but entertaining enough and should be regarded as such, but of course it is not. Some scholars (though no one I know) renamed this a rumor and have long wondered if Shakespeare’s skull is really missing.

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Well, if you are lucky enough to live in the U.K. and are interested in this mystery you are in luck! BBC 4 will broadcast the findings of a 2014 archaeological investigation of Shakespeare’s grave at Holy Trinity church in Stratford-on-Avon tonight. The investigation set out to either dispel or confirm some of the rumors surround Shakespeare’s burial:

Was he buried standing up?

Why are flagstone markings so short?

Is this marked spot empty and is he buried somewhere else?

The answers to these questions suggest that both William and Anne are buried in the church and that the bodies extend past the markers. And no, he is not standing up but is laying just a few feet down.

But the real mystery, at least according to the researchers, is that the ground around Shakespeare’s head appears to have at one time been disturbed, suggesting that this rumor of theft could turn out to be true. However, the vicar of Holy Trinity, the Rev Patrick Taylor, is not convinced. After all, it is one thing to steal from the corner of some dark cemetery, it is quite another to steal into a locked church, removed some flagstones, remove the dirt, dig up a skull and put it all back again without anyone every noticing. Impossible? No. Improbable? Yes.

We should reserve judgment until after the documentary airs, but in honesty, this seems much ado about nothing.

Works Referenced

The Guardian, Shakespeare’s skull probably stolen by grave robbers, study finds

Google Books Argosy Volume 28 How Shakespeare’s Skull was stolen

Pulpmag.org The Argosy

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