"Stephen Orgel is interested in books and plays. But throughout The Invention of Shakespeare, Orgel is adamant that a/the book is not the play. These essays, written over thirty years, have an argumentative throughline...as he demonstrates the varied ways in which plays are mutable...The 'invention' of the book's title is about the way editors, critics and eras give a fixed identity to a figure we confidently but misleadingly identify as 'Shakespeare'....Throughout these essays we are treated to Orgel's brilliance as a literary critic and close reader. He moves not just effortlessly but analogously from material books a study of blanks, lacunae, the empty parentheses." (Times Literary Supplement) "an illuminating journey through thirty years of insight from one of the world's foremost Shakespearean scholars. Throughout, Orgel eschews the existence of a final written version of a Shakespearean play. He encourages rather a vision of Shakespeare's plays as ever-evolving works to be staged...[ A] useful and informative guide for the scholar of Shakespeare and those with a general interest in the Bard. It confirms Orgel's position as one of the most learned and prolific Shakespearean experts, whose insights continue to educate and inspire." (Forum for Modern Language Studies) "Stephen Orgel is one of the greatest Shakespeare and early modern scholars of our time, and every single one of these pieces is engaging, exhilarating, revelatory, thought-provoking." (Peter Holland, University of Notre Dame)