To celebrate the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, the March/April issue of the St. Austin Review pays homage to the Bard. Highlights include:

Fr. Peter Milward admires “Marian Heroines in Shakespeare’s Plays”.

Frank Brownlow exposes “What Shakespeare’s Editors Don’t Know”.

Lydia Martin examines “Married Virtue: Justice and Mercy as Shakespeare’s Defense against Madness”.

Andrew Seeley grapples with “Hamlet and the Problem of Conscience”.

Maria Devlin focuses on “A Local Habitation and a Name: Logos and Language in Macbeth”.

“Shakespeare: A Precursor of Atheism?” Michael Hanke discovers “An Example of German Literary Scholarship out of its Depth”.

Brendan D. King looks at “Shakespeare in the Soviet Union”.

Susan Treacy interviews award-winning composer Michael Kurek on “Reimagining Shakespeare’s Macbeth as a Ballet”.

Kevin O’Brien laments “Bad Acting and Shakespeare”.

Fr. Dwight Logenecker compares “Pitiful Caliban and Gollum”.

Ken Clark illumines The Murder of the Sons of Edward IV by Theodor Hildebrandt.

Frank O. Bannock waxes aesthetic on “My Philosophy of Art and Why I Paint”.

Fr. Benedict Kiely discusses “Something Too Good to be Told”.

Donna Spivey Ellington reviews Shakespeare’s Other World by Fr. Peter Milward.

Marie Dudzik reviews Shakespearian Echoes by Fr. Peter Milward.

Carol Anne Jones reviews Meta-Drama in King Lear by Fr. Peter Milward.

Kenneth Colston reviews The Sacred Monster of Thomism: An Introduction to the Life and Legacy of Réginald Garrigou-Lagrange by Richard Peddicord, OP.

Melvin S. Arrington, Jr. reviews Angels and Saints by Scott Hahn.

Paula Gallagher reviews Don’t You Forget About Me, a novel by Erin McCole Cupp.

Plus new poetry by Fr. Peter Milward, Philip C. Kolin and Carl E. Olson.

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