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cantonlittle's review against another edition
5.0
96/100 Arguably, one of the greatest plays ever written. One of Shakespeare's masterpieces. It may be my favorite!
sruti_'s review against another edition
4.0
Masterful, poignant. My only complaint was the treatment of women in this play. Goneril and Regan are cast as excellent villains, but misogyny weakens their characterizations by the end of the play. Cordelia haunts the play and Lear, but she is barely present as a character. I wish she was more fleshed out and her sisters' evil was not so closely linked with female sexuality.
haniafrijolitos's review against another edition
3.0
Would be cooler if my teacher didn't ruin it for me :)
kathrinreads's review against another edition
5.0
I loved this play. I understand now why it is one of the most popular Shakespeare plays and why it is so often referenced as the Shakespearian tragedy.
cajonist's review against another edition
...not sure what I made of this. It didn’t shock or move me and I couldn’t always parse what point it was making when it got philosophical.
King Lear is supposedly Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy but I don’t see a peer to Hamlet here, not to mind a superior. I mean... unless it’s his greatest tragedy because its characters are the most miserable? I’m not sure though that that’s the actual quality one desires in the search for what makes a tragedy great.
I think what I really need to do is see Lear staged and re-visit but for now this place-holder view is as much of a shrug as anything.
King Lear is supposedly Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy but I don’t see a peer to Hamlet here, not to mind a superior. I mean... unless it’s his greatest tragedy because its characters are the most miserable? I’m not sure though that that’s the actual quality one desires in the search for what makes a tragedy great.
I think what I really need to do is see Lear staged and re-visit but for now this place-holder view is as much of a shrug as anything.
jseymour2000's review against another edition
3.0
Reading this at the same time as Titus Andronicus really downplayed the dark elements of this play. It's nowhere near as bad as that one.