The Tragedy of Macbeth, Part II: The Seed of Banquo

· Noah Lukeman
4.2
15 reviews
Ebook
120
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

“An audacious achievement.”

--Jennifer Lee Carrell, Ph.D. (Harvard)

New York Times Bestselling author of Interred With Their Bones/The Shakespeare Secret

“Lukeman’s sequel to the Scottish play succeeds as both a fascinating literary exercise and an entertaining play in its own right….[A] poetic, well-paced drama.”

Booklist

Recommended Reading, New York Magazine Fall Preview

In 1610, The Tragedy of Macbeth was first performed. 400 years later: the sequel, written as a five-act play in blank verse.

Ten years king, Malcolm sits on an uneasy throne. If Malcolm’s mind is haunted by the ghosts of his royal father (“gracious Duncan”) as well as the thane and lady who so bloodily betrayed him, Malcolm’s soul is sickened, as was Macbeth’s, by the witches’ prophecy that from Banquo’s seed would spring a line of Scottish kings: a prophecy that remained unfulfilled at the end of Shakespeare’s play. The witches also taunt Malcolm with riddles all his own: that sorrows will visit him from Ireland (where his younger brother fled upon their father’s death); that his love for Macbeth will breed fresh treachery. True to the Shakespearean model, its devious plot unfolding in five acts and its speech set to the measure of blank verse, Macbeth, Part II, draws bold the tragedy of a powerful man undone by the terrors he imagines and the truths he fails to see.

"Noah Lukeman's bold sequel to Macbeth, written in blank verse, is a fierce, memory-ridden love letter to Shakespeare, and an enthralling reminder that, in our imagination, Shakespeare's greatest plays have no end."

--Nigel Cliff, author of The Shakespeare Riots

“Lukeman did a top-notch job creating a fresh play in the style of Shakespeare. The story moves quite briskly, and takes quite a few intriguing twists....The rhythm of the words and the drama of the story would make for quite a suspenseful and entertaining show.”

Fashionista Piranha

“Lukeman truly has mastered the Shakespearian art and created a play that can stand as a sequel to the great Shakespearian play.”

—A.M. Perez, Amanda's Weekly Zen

Ratings and reviews

4.2
15 reviews
Never give up
December 10, 2021
Noah lukeman's writing in introduction seems as like an arrogant person. It seems he has tried to underestimate the greatest author Shakespeare. Undoubtedly rude lukeman. He has clearly underestimated the bard of avon by saying he wasn't a scholar. He was not clever, intelligent person. Actually he can't understand Shakespeare. It is out of his comprehension to understand Shakespeare and his writings. He looks like an annoyed. He is blaming the author. A bad workman quarrels with his tools.
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Tsireledzo Matshona
July 16, 2019
Good read
5 people found this review helpful
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Jasvinder Singh
May 23, 2020
I read this book in our class school in English
4 people found this review helpful
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About the author

 A 20 year veteran of the book publishing industry, Noah Lukeman is author of several books on the craft of writing, including The First Five Pages, The Plot Thickens and A Dash of Style: The Art and Mastery of Punctuation, published by W.W. Norton in the U.S. and by Oxford University Press in the U.K. His critically-acclaimed books have been selections of multiple book clubs, Book Sense 76 picks, Publishers Weekly Daily picks, and translated into Japanese, Portuguese, Korean, Turkish, Chinese and Indonesian. His screenplay, Brothers in Arms, was selected for Hollywood’s Black List top 100 screenplays of the year. Noah lives in New York. Please feel free to contact him at noahlukeman.com 

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