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Hamlet
Hamlet
Aug 12, 2025 5:38 AM

Author:William Shakespeare,Alan Sinfield

Hamlet

'The Mona Lisa of literature' T. S. Eliot

In Shakespeare's verbally dazzling and eternally enigmatic exploration of conscience, madness and the nature of humanity, a young prince meets his father's ghost in the middle of the night, who accuses his own brother - now married to his widow - of murdering him. The prince devises a scheme to test the truth of the ghost's accusation, feigning wild insanity while plotting revenge. But his actions soon begin to wreak havoc on innocent and guilty alike.

Used and Recommended by the National Theatre

General Editor Stanley Wells

Edited by T. J. B. Spencer

Introduction by Alan Sinfield

Reviews

He has written the truth as he saw it, and written it with passion, charm - and self-awareness

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday

The book brims with humour and each sentence is a delight to read

—— Andrew Wilson , Independent

This glorious memoir - funny and poignant in equal measure

—— Brian Viner , Daily Mail

There is much that is moving in Mars-Jones's memoir of his father... The writing sings with cleverness and wit

—— Claudia FitzHerbert , The Sunday Telegraph

Mars-Jones's memoir, clotted and rich and true, does its job rather well

—— Rachel Cooke , New Statesman

The account... of caring for his father is especially touching

—— Kate Kellaway , The Observer

Intensely written

—— Elisa Segrave , The Spectator

His most remarkable book to date, which is in turns knowing and dextrous, hilarious and poignant

—— Richard Canning , Literary Review

Mars-Jones's achievement in Kid Gloves is to portray such painful moments with humour and grace... Kid Gloves is full of truth about the ironies of family life, of the ways that we define ourselves through our parents and against them

—— Bee Wilson , Sunday Times

The book brims with humour and each sentence is a delight to read. It also contains - courtesy of an extended metaphor drawn from Jane Grigson's recipe for cooking salmon in a court-bouillon - one of the best descriptions of sibling rivalry in contemporary literature. Above all, it is a celebration of language, a love shared by father and son alike

—— Andrew Wilson , Independent

While waiting for more of Adam Mars Jones's gripping Pilcrow sequence, I was beguiled by Kid Gloves (Particular Books), his memoir of his high court judge father, which is witty, sardonic and humane. There are some entertaining legal set pieces, one revolving round James Bond and Ian Fleming, and a great account of young Adam's coming out as gay over the New Year of 1977. His father was homophobic but came round, though he never seemed able to remember Adam's partner's name. one of the funniest passages describes Dad's irritation at not being able to cram all his honorifics on to his American Express Gold Card: he has to abbreviate them to "Sir Wm". A paradoxical character, affectionately recalled.

—— Margaret Drabble , New Statesman

Worries must be raised about the book business by the way that one of the best memoirs not only of this year but many apparently struggled to find a publisher. Kid Gloves: a Voyage Round My Father by Adam Mars-Jones (Particular Books) takes a family situation that would have prompted many writers to gory score-settling - a liberal gay son providing end-of-life care to his father, a homophobic Tory judge - and produces an account that manages to be tender, sharp and funny while being kinder to the subject than you might expect and tougher on the writer who is sitting in judgement.

—— Mark Lawson , New Statesman

Funny and subtle... the book's special chemistry derives from the disparity between the painful facts described and the affection with which they are recounted

—— Gaby Wood , Telegraph

Top of my list is Kid Gloves, Adam Mars-Jones's funny, tough, scrupulously fair memoir of his late father, the irascible High Court judge William Mars-Jones. Their vexed relationship, rich in vulnerability, frustration and farce, is unpacked for us with grace and subtle wit, not least the moment when Mars-Jones fils has to tell Mars-Jones pére, "a homophobe's homophobe", that he is gay. ... In spite of these wounds, the overwhelming tone of the memoir is one of profound affection and forbearance.

—— Elizabeth Lowry , TLS

Ingeniously constructed and full of insight

—— Leo Robson , TLS

A subtle, topical, thought-provoking and painfully uncomfortable novel.

—— John Sutherland , The Times

You can’t help feeling that this is an important book, and it’s hugely compelling… Worthy of its status as a Booker long-listee.

—— Emma Herdman , UK Press Syndication

Jacobson’s most significantly Jewish book and quite possibly his masterpiece.

—— Standpoint

The persistent reader will be duly rewarded, as the denouement reveals a hidden logic and the book climaxes with a brilliant literary (and philosophical) coup.

—— Sunday Business Post

Contemporary literature is overloaded with millenarian visions of destroyed landscapes and societies in flames, but Jacobson has produced one that feels frighteningly new by turning the focus within: the ruins here are the ruins of language, imagination, love itself.

—— Tim Martin , Daily Telegraph

The savagery of his imagery and his conclusions are impossible to forget, and maybe even to deny.

—— Herald

Confounds expectations but confirms Jacobson’s reputation.

—— New Statesman

I loved this book. A compelling tale that is bound to be a hot contender for the Booker.

—— Rebecca Wallersteiner , Lady

Impressive, disturbingly timely – a massive step aside and a noticeable step up from most of his other fiction.

—— Bharat Tandon , Times Literary Supplement

A pivotal – and impressive change of direction for [Jacobson].

—— Gerald Isaaman , UK Press Syndication

Sentence by sentence, he remains perhaps the best British author around.

—— James Walton , Spectator

This is Jacobson at his provocative, surprising, brilliant best.

—— Kate Saunders , Saga Magazine

Thrilling written and the most ambitious work on the shortlist… Once you’ve worked out what’s going on, you’ll be gripped by its hints of an anti-Semitic armageddon.

—— Mail on Sunday

It’s stark and daring.

—— Gaby Wood , Telegraph

A brilliant conspiracy yarn examining the manipulation of collective memory.

—— Mail on Sunday

It's not just the subject of this book that will shock Jacobson fans, its distinct narrative style also comes as a surprise. A pleasant one at that.

—— Dan Lewis , Travel Guide

A dystopian vision, haunting and memorable

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

It’s a triumph of creative writing. I finished it and started it again

—— Philippa Gregory , Daily Express

Jacobson has written a subtle, topical, thought-provoking and painfully uncomfortable novel

—— John Sutherland , The Times

chilling and provocative, Jacobson is at the height of his powers here

—— Herald

Hadley, who won the Hawthornden prize this month for The Past, is literary fiction’s best kept secret. Don’t let her fellow novelists keep her for themselves.

—— Alex O'Connell , The Times

[The Past is] magnificently done: half celebration, half elegy.

—— Phil Baker , Sunday Times

There are hints of Larkin in her tender descriptions of landscape and imaginative responses to the ineffable… All her books are wonderful.

—— Anthony Quinn , Guardian

This is a hugely enjoyable and keenly intelligent novel, brimming with the vitality of unruly desire.

—— Sunday Telegraph
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