Review
An exhilarating ride . . . simply the best, most poetically and historically intelligent reading of the sonnets since
Shakespeare's Perjured Eye. --
Marshall Grossman, University of Maryland
Review
"Freinkel brilliantly reorganizes our understanding of "modern" subjectivity as expressed in Shakespeare's supposedly Petrarchan poetry... what this book accomplishes is a major shift in out understanding of Renaissance lyric." -- Studies in English Literature
"Engaging, provocative, impressively learned, and heavily annotated... [Lisa Freinkel's] book does much relocate Shakespeare in relation to a theological tradition extending from St. Paul to Luther." -- Shakespeare Bulletin
"By dislodging our ways of thinking about conventions of allegory and our status as readers generally, Reading Shakespeare's Will does the field of Renaissance studies a tremendous service. We will be reading -- and discussing -- Freinkel's book for a long time." -- Christopher Martin, Sixteenth Century Journal
"Freinkel's style is artful and original, her research is comprehensive, and her assertions are intriguing... her detailed observations and commentary read and reread Shakespeare's figurative language from multiple perspectives, which illustrate her postmodern celebration of the undying ambiguity of figural interpretation." -- Gayle Gaskill, Renaissance Quarterly
"The writing is always dramatic and the argument presented with an eagerness." -- John Roe, MLR
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