Hamlet: From Drama to Prose
Shakespeare's Tragedy Retold as a Novel — A Complete Prose Adaptation with Afterword
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Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
This prose adaptation of Shakespeare's Hamlet includes:
- Complete retelling of the tragedy as a novel (18,700 words)
- Original afterword on the art and tradition of adapting Shakespeare
- Author biography of William Shakespeare
- Adapter biography with translation credentials
A king is murdered by his brother. The dead man's son discovers the truth — and cannot act on it. Between the knowing and the doing, a kingdom falls.
Hamlet is the most performed, most studied, and most quoted play in the English language. It is also one of the most difficult to actually read. Shakespeare wrote for actors, not for readers. The text on the page is a script: stage directions, speech prefixes, verse lineation, and four-hundred-year-old syntax that even scholars debate.
This book does something different. It takes the architecture of Shakespeare's play — every scene, every character, every turn of the plot — and rebuilds it as prose narrative. Not a summary. Not a simplification. A transmutation: the play's events told as a novel would tell them, with interiority, pacing, and a narrative voice that makes the action legible in a way the script alone cannot.
You will hear Hamlet's words when his words matter. You will also hear what he thinks when the stage would only show silence. Claudius at prayer. Ophelia unraveling. The gravedigger singing. The final duel in which every instrument of death finds the wrong target.
Shakespeare himself was an adapter — thirty-four of his thirty-seven plays drew from existing sources. Hamlet descends from Saxo Grammaticus, through the lost Ur-Hamlet, into the version we know. To retell Shakespeare is not to betray him. It is to continue his method.
Read in under an hour. Understood for a lifetime.