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Stalking Shakespeare

A Memoir of Madness, Murder, and My Search for the Poet Beneath the Paint

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
*Winner of the 2024 Mississippi Institute of Arts & Letters Award for Life Writing*

"A wickedly entertaining" (The New York Times) detective story that chronicles one Mississippi man's relentless search for an authentic portrait of William Shakespeare.

Following his divorce, down-and-out writer and Mississippi exile Lee Durkee holed himself up in a Vermont fishing shack and fell prey to a decades-long obsession with Shakespearian portraiture. It began with a simple premise: despite the prevalence of popular portraits, no one really knows what Shakespeare looked like. That the Bard of Avon has gotten progressively handsomer in modern depictions seems only to reinforce this point.

"Intensely readable...with bust-out laughing moments" (Garden & Gun), Stalking Shakespeare is Durkee's fascinating memoir about a hobby gone awry, the 400-year-old myriad portraits attached to the famous playwright, and Durkee's own unrelenting search for a lost picture of the Bard painted from real life. As Durkee becomes better at beguiling curators into testing their paintings with X-ray and infrared technologies, we get a front-row seat to the captivating mysteries—and unsolved murders—surrounding the various portraits rumored to depict Shakespeare.

Whisking us backward in time through layers of paint and into the pages of obscure books on the Elizabethans, Durkee travels from Vermont to Tokyo to Mississippi to DC and ultimately to London to confront the stuffy curators forever protecting the Bard's image. For his part, Durkee is the adversary they didn't know they had—a self-described dilettante with nothing to lose, the "Dan Brown of Elizabethan portraiture."

A bizarre and surprisingly moving blend of biography, art history, and madness, Stalking Shakespeare is a "gripping, poignant, and enjoyable" (The Washington Post) journey that will forever change the way you look at one of history's greatest cultural and literary icons.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Matt Godfrey's voice is friendly but with a ragged edge--a perfect choice to deliver this tequila-, Pop-Tart-, sake-, and Adderall-fueled trip down the rabbit hole of Shakespeare's life and legacy. This is a true saga of the author's unconventional, obsessive, and exhaustive search to discover Shakespeare's "true" portrait and identity. Godfrey masterfully delivers the author's wry asides and humorous tone as he uncovers the many lies, fakes, and conspiracies surrounding Shakespeare and his portraits. Even if you can't follow all the intrigues and complexities of the art world, painting restorations, and Elizabethan court life, Godfrey is like an eccentric friend who will drag you along for the ride. Who knew that the world of Elizabethan portraiture could be so entertaining? L.T. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
    • Library Journal

      June 10, 2024

      In this absorbing memoir, essayist and novelist Durkee (The Last Taxi Driver) recounts his obsessive search for an authentic, true-to-life painted portrait of Shakespeare. Is it his imagination, or are portraits of the Bard getting prettier by the century? At loose ends in Vermont after a divorce, Durkee devotes several long winters to scrutinizing prospective portraits and unashamedly pummeling librarians, museum curators, and Shakespeare scholars with his questions and photo requests. Neither a Shakespeare scholar nor an art historian, Durkee hopes his outsider status will help him avoid the preconceptions that seem to plague many Shakespeare devotees when discussing the true identity (identities?) of the author of some of the world's most beloved poetry and dramas. Despite the painstakingly detailed descriptions of his research, the narrative flows easily, thanks to Durkee's snappy prose and wry, self-deprecating sense of humor, perfectly captured in audio by narrator Matt Godfrey. Godfrey also employs a compassionate tone, conveying Durkee's vulnerability and engendering much empathy for the single-minded researcher, especially when he reveals his battles with addiction. VERDICT Anyone with an interest in the Shakespeare author controversy or academic research in general should enjoy Durkee's colorful account of dark winters spent obsessing over "his homespun collection" of "mugshot bards."--Beth Farrell

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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