The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of His Strange Eventful Life and Loves

Could a treasure trove of 400-year-old letters constitute a previously unknown "diary" written by William Shakespeare? After 25 years of research, we believe the astonishing answer is yes. We learn that Shakespeare left home bound for the New World, where he hoped to restore is family's fortunes. Although he never made it to North American shores, these letters uncover the truth about the earliest pilgrims and reveal that Shakespeare was kept closer to home to fight in a pivotal battle for England against Spain (and that he used his theatrical talents to help win it). Overall, these remarkable letters represent a wealth of as-yet-undiscovered knowledge about Shakespeare's relationships, personality, and career as he carves out his place in the chaotic world of 16th-century London, describing vibrant details from his arrival in London to the premiere of Titus Andronicus, his first play to be staged.

In 1989 I was an actor and performed a one-man play about the life of William Shakespeare in London. "Miss B", an elderly woman who had seen the play more than once, was apparently sufficiently impressed by my impersonation of the Bard that she offered to show me some old, never-published letters that she believed were written by William Shakespeare. Although I was initially skeptical, it was an offer too good to pass up and, to be honest, as a struggling actor in those days, I didn't have anything better to do with my time! We met almost daily for several weeks and what I discovered began to unravel almost everything I thought I knew about the great poet and playwright.

The Prologue to The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of his Strange Eventful Life and Loves describes our meetings, more about my mysterious benefactor, and how I spent over two decades since then decoding and researching what these letters had to say.

In brief, Shakespeare left his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon in 1586 as a jack-of-all-trades for a troupe of traveling players. He wrote the letters to his friend John Combe, but intended them as a record of his journey, including the whys and wherefores, so that his son, Hamnet (two years old in 1586) would know his father in the event he was unable to return. Because he wanted to "report his cause aright", his letters are remarkably detailed and intimate.

Although Hamnet never apparently saw these letters (and Shakespeare did return home) we are the beneficiaries of his observations of life in Elizabethan England; first-hand secrets about the rulers of the land (and those who sought to rule); his participation in the war with Spain that could have changed history (and why we would be speaking Spanish in America today, among other alternate possible outcomes); bitter truths about his father, wife, and patrons; identities revealed of a Dark Lady and a heroic lady loved and lost.

The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare are updated for the modern reader and based on a very true story!

"1129336471"
The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of His Strange Eventful Life and Loves

Could a treasure trove of 400-year-old letters constitute a previously unknown "diary" written by William Shakespeare? After 25 years of research, we believe the astonishing answer is yes. We learn that Shakespeare left home bound for the New World, where he hoped to restore is family's fortunes. Although he never made it to North American shores, these letters uncover the truth about the earliest pilgrims and reveal that Shakespeare was kept closer to home to fight in a pivotal battle for England against Spain (and that he used his theatrical talents to help win it). Overall, these remarkable letters represent a wealth of as-yet-undiscovered knowledge about Shakespeare's relationships, personality, and career as he carves out his place in the chaotic world of 16th-century London, describing vibrant details from his arrival in London to the premiere of Titus Andronicus, his first play to be staged.

In 1989 I was an actor and performed a one-man play about the life of William Shakespeare in London. "Miss B", an elderly woman who had seen the play more than once, was apparently sufficiently impressed by my impersonation of the Bard that she offered to show me some old, never-published letters that she believed were written by William Shakespeare. Although I was initially skeptical, it was an offer too good to pass up and, to be honest, as a struggling actor in those days, I didn't have anything better to do with my time! We met almost daily for several weeks and what I discovered began to unravel almost everything I thought I knew about the great poet and playwright.

The Prologue to The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of his Strange Eventful Life and Loves describes our meetings, more about my mysterious benefactor, and how I spent over two decades since then decoding and researching what these letters had to say.

In brief, Shakespeare left his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon in 1586 as a jack-of-all-trades for a troupe of traveling players. He wrote the letters to his friend John Combe, but intended them as a record of his journey, including the whys and wherefores, so that his son, Hamnet (two years old in 1586) would know his father in the event he was unable to return. Because he wanted to "report his cause aright", his letters are remarkably detailed and intimate.

Although Hamnet never apparently saw these letters (and Shakespeare did return home) we are the beneficiaries of his observations of life in Elizabethan England; first-hand secrets about the rulers of the land (and those who sought to rule); his participation in the war with Spain that could have changed history (and why we would be speaking Spanish in America today, among other alternate possible outcomes); bitter truths about his father, wife, and patrons; identities revealed of a Dark Lady and a heroic lady loved and lost.

The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare are updated for the modern reader and based on a very true story!

19.95 In Stock
The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of His Strange Eventful Life and Loves

The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of His Strange Eventful Life and Loves

by Terry Tamminen
The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of His Strange Eventful Life and Loves

The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of His Strange Eventful Life and Loves

by Terry Tamminen

Paperback

$19.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Could a treasure trove of 400-year-old letters constitute a previously unknown "diary" written by William Shakespeare? After 25 years of research, we believe the astonishing answer is yes. We learn that Shakespeare left home bound for the New World, where he hoped to restore is family's fortunes. Although he never made it to North American shores, these letters uncover the truth about the earliest pilgrims and reveal that Shakespeare was kept closer to home to fight in a pivotal battle for England against Spain (and that he used his theatrical talents to help win it). Overall, these remarkable letters represent a wealth of as-yet-undiscovered knowledge about Shakespeare's relationships, personality, and career as he carves out his place in the chaotic world of 16th-century London, describing vibrant details from his arrival in London to the premiere of Titus Andronicus, his first play to be staged.

In 1989 I was an actor and performed a one-man play about the life of William Shakespeare in London. "Miss B", an elderly woman who had seen the play more than once, was apparently sufficiently impressed by my impersonation of the Bard that she offered to show me some old, never-published letters that she believed were written by William Shakespeare. Although I was initially skeptical, it was an offer too good to pass up and, to be honest, as a struggling actor in those days, I didn't have anything better to do with my time! We met almost daily for several weeks and what I discovered began to unravel almost everything I thought I knew about the great poet and playwright.

The Prologue to The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare: The Undiscovered Diary of his Strange Eventful Life and Loves describes our meetings, more about my mysterious benefactor, and how I spent over two decades since then decoding and researching what these letters had to say.

In brief, Shakespeare left his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon in 1586 as a jack-of-all-trades for a troupe of traveling players. He wrote the letters to his friend John Combe, but intended them as a record of his journey, including the whys and wherefores, so that his son, Hamnet (two years old in 1586) would know his father in the event he was unable to return. Because he wanted to "report his cause aright", his letters are remarkably detailed and intimate.

Although Hamnet never apparently saw these letters (and Shakespeare did return home) we are the beneficiaries of his observations of life in Elizabethan England; first-hand secrets about the rulers of the land (and those who sought to rule); his participation in the war with Spain that could have changed history (and why we would be speaking Spanish in America today, among other alternate possible outcomes); bitter truths about his father, wife, and patrons; identities revealed of a Dark Lady and a heroic lady loved and lost.

The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare are updated for the modern reader and based on a very true story!


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780999736838
Publisher: Shakespeare House Press
Publication date: 12/21/2018
Pages: 546
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.22(d)

About the Author

Although he studied theatre and spent several years performing and directing Shakespeare's plays, Terry Tamminen may be the most unlikely person to have discovered The Lost Letters of William Shakespeare.. He studied Theatre Arts at California State University Northridge; directed the Burbank Civic Light Opera and Malibu Summerstage Theatre; served as the resident Shakespeare lecturer for the Los Angeles Music Center Education Division; and wrote "Will Power", the life of William Shakespeare, a one-man play that he performed in the US, Europe, and Africa. While performing the play in England in 1989, he discovered the lost letters of William Shakespeare and has been researching their authenticity and context for over two decades. A United States Coast Guard-licensed ship captain, Terry has long been drawn to the undersea world and to the preservation of ocean resources including studies on conch depletion in the Bahamas, manatee populations in Florida coastal waters, and mariculture in the Gulf States with Texas A&M University. He founded the non-profit Santa Monica BayKeeper in 1993 and serves today on the Board of Directors of the International Waterkeeper Alliance. He later served as the Executive Director of the Environment Now Foundation in Santa Monica, CA and co-founded the Frank G. Wells Environmental Law Clinic at the School of Law, University of California Los Angeles. In the summer of 2003, Terry helped Arnold Schwarzenegger win the historic recall election and become Governor of California. He was appointed as the Secretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency in November 2003 and was later appointed Cabinet Secretary, the Chief Policy Advisor to the Governor. During his service in state government, Terry was the architect of many groundbreaking sustainability policies, including the Hydrogen Highway Network, the Million Solar Roofs initiative, California's landmark Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, and the creation of over a million acres of "ocean parks" along California's coastline. In February 2007, Terry founded the non-profit organization Seventh Generation Advisors to help other states and world governments adopt clean energy and sustainability polices based on California's successes. He was named the Cullman Senior Fellow for climate policy at The New America Foundation and has advised global companies and institutional investors on sustainability, including Walmart, Proctor & Gamble, Netjets, Pegasus Capital Advisors, California's pension funds, and the University of California Regents Endowment. In 2008, Terry served as an energy and climate change policy advisor to presidential candidate Barak Obama and has continued to advise his Energy Secretaries and USEPA Administrators since then. In 2010 Terry co-founded the R20 Regions of Climate Action in collaboration with the United Nations, a new public-private partnership, bringing together sub-national governments; businesses; financial markets; NGOs; and academia to implement measurable, large-scale, low-carbon and climate resilient economic development projects that can simultaneously solve the climate crisis and build a sustainable global economy. Terry joined forces with actor and environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio in 2016 and serves today as CEO of his Foundation. Learn more at http: //leonardodicaprio.org Terry Tamminen was named Vanity Fair's May 2007 Environmental Hero and in TIME Magazine's 2007 Earthday edition, he was featured in the "51 Things We Can Do" section. In 2008, The Guardian ranked Terry No. 1 in its "Top 50 People Who Can Save the Planet." In 2009, Tamminen was named an "Eco Baron" in Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Edward Humes's book, Eco Barons: The Dreamers, Schemers, and Millionaires Who Are Saving Our Planet. In 2011, Terry was one of six finalists for the Zayed Future Energy Prize.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Foreword

Acknowledgements

Prologue: How a Sometimes-Starving Actor Stumbled Upon Shakespeare’s Lost Letters

Scribe’s Notes

Letter 1: July 5, 1586: Young Shakespeare sets out from Stratford to make his fortune in the New World, but first must earn entry into a world of traveling players by mending a wheel.

Letter 2: July 15, 1586: Three theatrical masks hide a great truth while two new friends reveal surprising truths about fathers and sons.

Letter 3: August 1, 1586: A routine day among the players is described, but the tale of a valiant Englishmen against the Turks renders it as memorable as certain advice from dear Uncle Henry.

Letter 4: September 20, 1586: Francis Drake’s stolen riches from America excite Shakespeare, whose soul may be more at risk over a stolen map of those realms than the new threat to his body from a galloping Plague.

Letter 5: October 31, 1586: The players act for a drunken Prince in Denmark, but memories stir of life with a drunken father in Stratford.

Letter 6: November 11, 1586: The Virgin Queen is attacked by foreign dogs and the Shakespeares find their kinsman’s head on a pike.

Letter 7: November 18, 1586: Our Stratford lad beholds a London bridge fantastical, a city of human gallimaufry, a Theatre like no other, and a brother long lost.

Letter 8: December 10, 1586: Shakespeare learns how his wife is struggling in Stratford and why his company of players in London is so dangerously divided by faith.

Letter 9: January 14, 1587: Death comes near, but a shrewd physician and a bundle of books provide an adequate defense, just in time for the patient to claim a great prize.

Letter 10: May 1, 1587: A passage to the New World with an unlikely companion is foreclosed, but new worlds of love, and on the stage, are unexpectedly opened.

Letter 11: September 9, 1587: Shakespeare visits Stratford, but finds you cannot so easily go home, while his Protestant homeland may be overthrown by Catholic Spain and every man will soon be a player in that life-or-death drama.

Letter 12: December 15, 1587: Some players fight and die, but others perform for the Queen and her powerful Earls as the Spanish thunder of war grows to an inescapable roar.

Letter 13: April 25, 1588: Players prepare for battle with real canon and swords and find that leave-taking from your favorite city, or loved ones, is never simple.

Letter 14: September 15, 1588: Spain invades England so the players must march to Tilbury, where some are made ghosts, but one spirit walks again among the living.

Letter 15: December 25, 1588: Joys and sorrows collide; some precious lives come to an end; and Shakespeare must decide to be, or not to be.

Letter 16: April 23, 1589: Two loved ones are laid to rest, but from a tragedy played upon a stage, the new playwright discovers the power and solace of the pen.

Glossary

Dramatis Personae

About the Author: Terry Tamminen

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews