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Cover of The Tragedy of Arthur

The Tragedy of Arthur

✍ Scribed by Phillips, Arthur


Book ID
108643479
Publisher
Random House
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
538 KB
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780679605065

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The Tragedy of Arthur is an emotional and elaborately constructed tour de force from “one of the best writers in America” (The Washington Post). Its doomed hero is Arthur Phillips, a young novelist struggling with a con artist father who works wonders of deception. Imprisoned for decades and nearing the end of his life, Arthur’s father reveals a treasure he’s kept secret for half a century: The Tragedy of Arthur, a previously unknown play by William Shakespeare. Arthur and his twin sister inherit their father’s mission: to see the manuscript published and acknowledged as the Bard’s last great gift to humanity . . . unless it’s their father’s last great con. By turns hilarious and haunting, this virtuosic novel, which includes Shakespeare’s (?) lost play in its entirety, brilliantly subverts our notions of truth, fiction, genius, and identity, as the two Arthurs—the novelist and the ancient king—play out their strangely intertwined fates.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
✍ Phillips, Arthur 📂 Fiction 📅 2011 🏛 Random House Publishing Group 🌐 English ⚖ 576 KB
cover
✍ Phillips, Arthur 📂 Fiction 📅 2011 🏛 Random House 🌐 English ⚖ 595 KB

### From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. A long-lost Shakespeare play surfaces in Phillips's wily fifth novel, a sublime faux memoir framed as the introduction to the play's first printing—a Modern Library edition, of course. Arthur Phillips and his twin sister, Dana, maintained an uncommon rel

cover
✍ Phillips, Arthur 📂 Fiction 📅 2011 🏛 Random House 🌐 English ⚖ 515 KB

### From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. A long-lost Shakespeare play surfaces in Phillips's wily fifth novel, a sublime faux memoir framed as the introduction to the play's first printing—a Modern Library edition, of course. Arthur Phillips and his twin sister, Dana, maintained an uncommon relat