Romeo and Juliet (Cambridge School Shakespeare)
 

Romeo and Juliet (Cambridge School Shakespeare)

by William Shakespeare

Modern editions of a popular and trusted series. This new edition of Romeo and Juliet is part of the established Cambridge School Shakespeare series and has been substantially updated with new and revised activities throughout. Remaining faithful to the series' active approach it treats the play as a script to be acted, explored and enjoyed. As well as the complete script of Romeo and... (read more)

Top tags: shakespeareclassicdramaplaytragedy (all tags)

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Amazon Reviews (5)
 

Most Helpful Reviews

Liked It

1 of 1 members found this review helpful.
dickensfan
  • Rated 5 stars

This play, while certainly tragic, has never seemed all that romantic to me. Instead, I see it as being about people who are hell-bent on getting their way, despite the costs.

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Didn’t Like It

Kassiana
  • Rated 2 stars

Like most of his plays, not a good read. See it performed instead.

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Community:
  • Rated 3.87749 stars
Amazon:
  • Rated 4 stars
 

Newest Comments

  • Alyssa C

    alyssa c said:

    I don't feel like this book has any romance at all. I mean, Romeo said so himself - he loved Juliet because she was beautiful.

    How shallow.

    posted Thursday, July 10 2008
  • gmatt63

    gmatt63 said:

    but isnt romance almost always a tragedy?

    Not in today's market. ;)

    posted Tuesday, May 27 2008 ( | view 1 reply )
  • gmatt63

    gmatt63 said:

    Thank you. There's nothing romantic about this play. Just two kids letting their hormones get the best of them. It happened in Elizabethan England too.

    posted Tuesday, May 27 2008
  • gmatt63

    gmatt63 said:

    I think this is probably Shakespeare's most misunderstood work. Everyone views it as a romance when in fact it's a tragedy.

    posted Sunday, May 18 2008 ( | view 5 replies )
  • James R

    james r said:

    Why couldn't Romeo and Juliet have killed themselves at the beginning of the play to save me from this terrible read.

    posted Sunday, May 18 2008
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