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Shakespeare: Slammed, Smeared, Savaged and Slaughtered, Part II

Shakespeare: Slammed, Smeared, Savaged and Slaughtered, Part II is adult literature featuring adult language and content. Jay Dubya converts ten of William Shakespeare's most famous plays into crazy risqué and bawdy satire/parodies. "Much Ado about Nothing" and "The Merry Wives of Windsor" are creatively assaulted along with "Henry IV, Part I" and "Henry IV, Part II." "Twelfth Night" and "The Taming of the Shrew" are also degenerated and pulverized. Jay Dubya also humorously broadsides "Julius Caesar" and "Romeo and Juliet." Finally the serious tragic plays "Macbeth" and "Hamlet" are hilariously clobbered and thoroughly corrupted. Shakespeare: S, S, S and S, Part II represents William Shakespeare as you've never before read the bard's historic work. Each play has been imaginatively rewritten and converted from dialogue into adult-oriented narrative/dialogue form. Shakespeare: Slammed, Smeared, Savaged and Slaughtered, Part II is the companion book to Shakespeare: S, S, S and S.
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A friend just gave us 8 packages of bacon from a pig they just had slaughtered. There is a funky Blueish...Greenish color on it!! Is it safe to eat?? Why did it turn those colors? What does it mean ??
Part II (cont.) And no matter how many of them, nor how big and strong there might be, he would fearlessly attack; until all with their tails between their legs had fled, ashamed beyond belief. He so loved us one and all, no partiality showed he, that when one day our older brother found him llying dead along the way, so grief stricken were we, that none of us were able through our tears to see; as we over his grave sprinkled, the most beautiful of fallen leaves. For a very long time afterward, months to be honest and true, none of us could even about him tell; our sorrow was so profoundly deep. Even to this day, some 60 years plus and now past, still only with a lump in my throat, and tears still held back, can I venture to recall, this one Greatest love of us all.
I have had to read and work with a lot of Shakespeare in my life. Unfortunately unless I am talking to other Bard Nerds like myself or actors most people sort of have their eyes glaze over or remember some awful experience of having to read The Scottish Play in high school. So if you have a favorite Character who is it and why? What about them excites or interest you - or in the case of one of my favorites Richard III, possibly repulses you a little? Love to hear your input, and would love to know that there is someone out there in cyberland who loves to experience these old plays too.
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