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Christopher Marlowe: The Complete Plays
Christopher Marlowe: The Complete Plays

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Author: Christopher Marlowe
Creators: Frank Romany, Robert Lindsey
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Category: Book

List Price: $15.00
Buy New: $8.52
You Save: $6.48 (43%)



New (40) Used (30) from $5.75

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 90576

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 752
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.1 x 1.5

ISBN: 0140436332
Dewey Decimal Number: 822.3
EAN: 9780140436334
ASIN: 0140436332

Publication Date: January 6, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Complete Plays (Penguin Classics)
  • Paperback - Christopher Marlowe the Complete Plays
  • Hardcover - Silver Poets of the 18th Century (Everyman's University Library)
  • Hardcover - Complete Plays and Poems (Everyman's University Library)
  • Paperback - Silver poets of the eighteenth century (Everyman's university library ; 1085)
  • Paperback - The Complete Plays and Poems (Everyman Paperbacks)
  • Paperback - Complete Plays and Poems (Everyman's Library (Paper))
  • Paperback - Complete Plays (Everyman Paperback Classics)
  • Paperback - The Complete Plays (Everyman Paperback Library)
  • Textbook Binding - Complete Plays.
  • Unknown Binding - Silver poets of the eighteenth century
  • Unknown Binding - Complete plays and poems
  • Paperback - The Complete Plays
  • Unknown Binding - Complete plays

Similar Items:

  • The Complete Poems and Translations (Penguin Classics)
  • Christopher Marlowe: Poet & Spy
  • The Duchess of Malfi and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics)
  • The Faerie Queene (Penguin Classics)
  • Five Plays (Oxford World's Classics)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This book gathers all seven of the dramas of Christopher Marlowe, in which the lure of dark forces drives the shifting balances between weak and strong, sacred and profane. Supported by textual notes and featuring modern punctuation and spelling, they include:
- Dido, Queen of Carthage
- Tamburlaine the Great, Part One
- Tamburlaine the Great, Part Two
- The Jew of Malta
- Doctor Faustus
- Edward the Second
- The Massacre at Paris

With a critical introduction, a chronology of Marlowes life, extensive commentary, and a glossary, this will remain the authoritative anthology of Marlowes plays for years to come.



Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Excellent   October 14, 2002
 9 out of 14 found this review helpful

I just had a brief comment. I don't consider myself an expert on Elizabethan era literature, but I've read a fair amount of Shakespeare and a number of the other authors of the period, and I have to say I was quite impressed with Marlowe. He certainly deserves to be better appreciated than he is. One of the lines from Edward II has stuck with me. I think I have it more or less correct, which was: "...and as for the multitude, they are like sparks--caught up in the embers of their poverty." You have to like an author who can write like that, but unfortunately he's been so overshadowed by the great Will that he doesn't get as much attention as he should. Anyway, by way of doing what I can, however, modest, to increase Marlowe's popularity, I'd like to say he's a damn good playwright, and that I have no qualms about throwing my own not inconsiderable bulk behind his reputation.


4 out of 5 stars Not quite Shakespeare, but good--great Compliation   February 22, 2002
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

The Complete Plays includes all of Marlowe's plays (well, obviously.) As a bonus it includes the rather fragmentory Massacre at Paris (which many critics theorize is a corupt, unfinished, or damaged text) in a scene division only format and both editions of Doctor Faustus.

Marlowe's plays, while not on the same level as Shakespeare's best, are far and away superior to any other Renaisance era dramatist (See also, Thomas Kyd, Ben Johnson, or Richard Wharfinger--if you can find him hehe.)

The best thing about Marlowe's plays is the level of respect for the audience. Judgement of the characters is (for the most part) left to the reader. Tamburlaine can be viewed as hero and/or villian.

And, it being Renaisance drama, there are some spectacular death scenes--Edward II's anal cruxifiction, Brabas's boiling alive, Faustus's dismemberment, and the Admiral's hanging/shooting to name a few.

One complaint, and this is really more of a preference, but the textual notes are in endnote format, rather than footnote format, and they're not numbered notes--all of which makes finding latin translations a little more time consuming.
But, for fans of the genre, this is the way to go.


4 out of 5 stars Not quite Shakespeare, but good--great Compliation   February 22, 2002
 9 out of 10 found this review helpful

The Complete Plays includes all of Marlowe's plays (well, obviously.) As a bonus it includes the rather fragmentory Massacre at Paris (which many critics theorize is a corupt, unfinished, or damaged text) in a scene division only format and both editions of Doctor Faustus.

Marlowe's plays, while not on the same level as Shakespeare's best, are far and away superior to any other Renaisance era dramatist (See also, Thomas Kyd, Ben Johnson, or Richard Wharfinger--if you can find him hehe.)

The best thing about Marlowe's plays is the level of respect for the audience. Judgement of the characters is (for the most part) left to the reader. Tamburlaine can be viewed as hero and/or villian.

And, it being Renaisance drama, there are some spectacular death scenes--Edward II's anal cruxifiction, Brabas's boiling alive, Faustus's dismemberment, and the Admiral's hanging/shooting to name a few.

One complaint, and this is really more of a preference, but the textual notes are in endnote format, rather than footnote format, and they're not numbered notes--all of which makes finding latin translations a little more time consuming.
But, for fans of the genre, this is the way to go.


4 out of 5 stars Good accessible edition   April 21, 2001
 12 out of 12 found this review helpful

This is a generally good and easily available, inexpensive edition of Marlowe's plays. My only reservation about it is Steane's edition of Dr. Faustus. He makes the worst of both major texts, taking the general outline from the 1616 text but throwing in a lot of corrupt scraps from the 1604 edition for the clown scenes. I would advise anyone who wants to read Dr. Faustus to look elsewhere. I'm convinced that the 1604 version is on the whole a corrupt and truncated version of the play, but if you prefer it you might look into the Folger Library edition. If on the other hand you would rather read the play more or less as I think Marlowe wrote it, try the Signet edition edited by Sylvan Barnet.

The other plays present no major textual problems (except for The Massacre at Paris, which is pretty hopeless) and this is a fine place to meet them.


5 out of 5 stars NON-ACADEMIC'S TAKE ON MARLOWE   December 7, 2000
 11 out of 15 found this review helpful

This book is a treat. Very reasonably priced, and it's all there. The plays sweep you along (I always envision darkening Puccini-like chords in the background) images and crackling dialogue abounds. My problem is: 1) I have never seen the plays produced. This is *such* a handicap. I actually yawned through Shakepeare's "Tempest" until I saw a fine production. Now it is hands-down my favorite play and 2)I have to get in the swing of reading Elizabethan English for every reading. Therefore, I do not recommend reading in short snippets if you are also dialect challenged.

Do keep in mind Marlowe (as Shakespeare) was trying to make a living, not write for the ages. He's trying to entice you to buy a ticket and be charmed. He succeeds admirably. There is something for everyone: action, derring do, comedy, and sharp insights.

Marlowe is your mysterious, wild, sometimes trecherous friend; brilliant, but can you trust him? Probably not. If he was a vintage southern American, he might say "I didn't take you to raise." Would he lie to you? mislead you? Of course. But in everything I have read of Marlowe's I hear his voice; he is *there.* With Shakespeare, I do not have that certainty.

Recommend reading "The Reckoning" by Charles Nicholl for an excellent biography on Marlowe. It reads like an excellent mystery, which he was.

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