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The Lodger: Shakespeare on Silver Street

By: Charles Nicholl
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN: 0141023740
ISBN-13: 9780141023748
Released: 03 Jul 2008
RRP: £8.99
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Customer Reviews

Not to be Overlooked - By: Steve Keen, 16 Sep 2008

Charles Nicholl's books about Marlowe & da Vinci have previously graced my reading list: the first is a meticulous reconstruction of Marlowe's final mealin an attempt to explain the playwright's death, which is sometimes a little repetitive; the second a more conventional biography of the renaissance polymath.

The Lodger is closer to the first,in being a depiction of how Shakespeare possibly lived whilstin London, centring on a single event, the signing of a legal deposition by the playwright which concerned his landlord, but fortunately without the repetitiousness.

So little is actually known about the bard that to say it is amazing nobody did this before is an understatement, but it is a tribute to Nicholl that he has picked up the baton & run with it.

As with the Marlowe book, The Reckoning,in The Lodger Nicholl takes small clues from documents relating to Shakespeare's deposition & expands them, using contemporary evidence, to construct a likely picture of how Shakespeare & his acquaintances would have lived & worked.

Somewhat tenuous, but well done nevertheless, is the speculation around how Shakespeare may have drawn on his everyday lifein order to write the plays. Previous attempts have been made, albeit on a grander scale, to prove that he was, for example, a seaman whose travels had given him access to the various locations featuredin the plays. It takes less of a stretch to imagine Shakespeare incorporating at least some of his day-to-day experience into his works, for example his association with George Wilkins, nominally a victualler,in reality most likely a pimp & keeper of a bawdy house, which Nicholl contends could quite easily have formed the basis of the frolicsin Measure For Measure.

Maybe as good as giving some colour to the life of the Swan of Avon is the picture Nicholl paints of the City of Londonin the early 16th Century. Throughout the book he carefully relates London then to London now, so he tells us, for example, what was formerlyin the place where modern day Gresham Street is. This interests me especially because I walked the streets of the city on a daily basis for the better part of two decades with my job, but what an excellent resource he has provided also for visitors to London curious about the history of the area they're walking around, just over the Millennium Bridge from the Tate Modern & within walking distance of a performance of one of the plays at the Barbican.

Also quite clever is the way Nicholl takes us on a tour of the Huguenot immigrant community of the time, their networks & preoccupations & the milieu of tire-making, which then links into the headgear seenin brothels, stately homes & theatres, bringing us neatly back to Shakespeare himself & the possible reason he found himself lodgingin the residence of the Mountjoys, themselves immigrant French tiremakers.

Nicholl's knowledge of the works of Shakespeare is extensive, & he uses this wellin relating the eventsin the book to the eventsin the works. But beyond that is his knowledge of the works of other Elizabethan & Jacobean writers & playwrights, including that of the aforementioned George Wilkins, whose plays seem to echo his criminal record, but also seem quite self-awarein assessing the lifestyle of a debauched & decadent cad.

Sometimes, true, the book nudges towards a prurient nudge-nudge wink-wink suggestiveness regarding the bard's personal life, but somehow never quite gets there, more maybe than can be said for some of the plays themselves! Altogether, whilst lacking some of the gravitas of the likes of Frank Kermode, this is an educational, erudite & entertaining book, one any Shakespeare aficionado can't afford to overlook.


Entertaining fiction - By: Holofernes, 26 Aug 2008
Nicholl is a very eloquent writer, engaging the reader who is willing to suspend his disbelief. My reading of Shakespeare's evidence is that he was at best evasive, at worst perjurious. As a book about Shakespeare the book is a non-starter. As an imaginative description of early seventeenth century London life, the book succeeds quite well.
Take a walk along Silver Street - and meet the real Shakespeare! - By: Plom de Nume, 07 May 2008
The Lodger came to me as a Christmas present that went unread till just now. Well, Happy Not-So-New Year to me - I'm so glad I finally got around to it! My bet is that you will be, too.

At first glance, the concept and/or genre of the book may not be universally inviting; but I assure anyone who picks this up that you'll be hooked from early on. So, before going into the subject, style & so on, please - take it on trust: this is a gem, one of the most positively infectious books around.

OK, here we go: Who would have guessed that the facts about Elizabethan hair-piece manufacture could be so absolutely fascinating! What's more, this material is utterly absorbing of its own accord, even without the Shakespeare-connection that is key to the book's construction.

All credit to the author, whose meticulous attention to detail is enriched by his obvious delightin the subject, along with a patent desire to communicate this to the reader with great clarity & goodwill. Scholarship this accomplished really shouldn't be so accessible - but it is!

Painstaking documentary research into immigrant populations & work patternsin Jacobean London is brought to vivid life, not just through the Shakespeare Effect, but by dint of sly & entertaining nods towards, for instance, Victoria Beckham, the hideous modern business concept of "networking" & the "bums on seats" commercial realities behind the vaunted offerings at the Globe & other venues (which, by the way, are shown to be not just theatres but places of assignation & integral to the sexual spice of the day).

Like Shakespeare, this fantastic work combines genuine instruction & fierce intellect with splendid entertainment. Not to mention a cast of characters - real people - who are brought to miraculous life by the author's dedicated leafing through arcane records & the like. I swear, by some alchemy, these people are lifted off old paper & imaginatively animated to the extent that you can hear their accents, smell the smells of their houses.

You don't even have to be a particular fan of the Bard (but how could you not be!) or a history-buff to get a genuine thrill, not just from the story that unfolds but from the amazing evocation of the Elizabethan/Jacobean world (especially the London setting) that is accomplished here.

That tangible sense of "real life" hits the reader with just the same intrigue & awe as, say, the cinematic equivalent whereby we might find ourselves viewing Ancient Roman or Trojan CGI vistas as if we were actually there (although this narrative equivalent is far more authenticin its particulars). The sense of verisimilitude is definitely the same; & this isn't some fictional Gladiator or mythic hero but Shakespeare, the man himself, Willin all his glory.

If you're not a fan now, perhaps this marvellous human perspective will help rehabilitate him from academic rarification? If, on the other hand, you're already a Shakespeare devotee, you will find some great new ways into his verse along the byways of Silver Street.

The temptation is to say that this delicious book "wears its scholarship lightly" or some such - but that would be a disservice to the deep forensic research, cross-referencing & deduction that underlie the riches shared here. It's the author's engaging voice that makes it all feel so easy & enticing; when actually great pains have been takenin bringing us these insights. The speculations are always credible, never shoe-horned. And,in any case, what we learn on the way is worth the trip on its own, so friendly & informed is our guide.

One last thought. This book represents true scholarship, genuine research, superior "yarn-spinning" & lovely, fluent sentences. In any just literary world, The Lodger would enjoy popular success far above that of The DaVinci Code (pardon my same breath).
The Bard's Questionable Associates - By: Ms Alex, 01 Mar 2008
From the initial court case Nicholl has managed to spin lives for all those involved even the servants, allowing for possibilities where fact is not available but never descending into if, buts & maybes. He looks at what the area was like but with the added flourish of imagining what the view from Shakespeare's window was, the route he would have used to get to the theatres & the landmarks he would have known - friends houses, taverns etc. This chapter combined with the one looking at the local parish records, tax records & the ground plans of a nearby house all make for a very evocative scene setting. The Mountjoys were French & Nicholl takes care to explain what a difference being Frenchin London made to their options & trading. Further chapters look at the make up of the house (who was living there, how it was furnished & split between working & living areas), the background of the Mountjoy family & their friends as well as what they were doingin 1604-12, the trade they were involved & how they got to know Shakespeare, the court case that left such a tantalising record & just what Shakespeare was doing lodgingin Silver Street anyway when he had a perfectly good housein Stratford.

It sounds dull & fact-laden. It's not dull. The facts are there but they are lightly handled & the author has a very readable voice. Out of several interesting possibilities that he points up some are very convincing, yet he is cautious & points out that no evidence means no conclusion can be drawn. Still the lives the Mountjoys lived seem pretty scandalous (brothel keepers for friends, illegitimate children & love affairs) & it was fascinating to see how Shakespeare might have included them & their problemsin his plays. I enjoyed this book far more than I thought I would, I was expecting a perfunctory read but ended up delighted by a well crafted, thought provoking & very, very likeable book that had something new to say about Shakespeare - no mean feat. 8/10.
Avaunt ye, Baconites! - By: A. Hickman, 10 Jan 2008
Charles Nicholl is on a roll. This is at least the fourth Nicholl book I've read (the others being "Borderlines," "The Reckoning," & "Somebody Else"), & each has been better than the last. Nothing could be more mundane, on its surface, than a book about one of the houses where Stratford property owner & family man William Shakespeare lodged when writing his playsin early Jacobean London. Surprisingly, however, the story of how he tendered his servicesin bringing about a "handfasting" (or betrothal) of his head-tire-making landlord's daughter & his apprentice, & the subsequent story of the couple's suing (some eight years later) of that landlord for failing to pay a promised dowry, makes for compulsive reading. Along the way, we learn something about the seamier side of Shakespeare's neighborhood, as well as the surprising character of some of his neighbors & acquaintances. These latter include a fortune-telling "doctor," Simon Forman, who had the ear of England's distaff elite, & a brothel-keeping poetaster (and the bard's collaborator on "Pericles"), George Wilkins. How all these characters come together makes for a fascinating journey into research on one of literature's most enigmatic geniuses, William Shakespeare himself. The text is supplemented by "the chief documents relating to the Bellott-Mountjoy case," most notable of which is the playwright's own 1612 deposition, signed "Willm Shaks." Francis Bacon could never have made this stuff up.


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