There are actually no direct references to Shakespeare or his works in J.F. Rivkin’s fantasy novel Silverglass, but there are several Shakespearean elements. The first bit that struck me was this passage, which will likely remind you of Romeo And Juliet: “But, my lord, think what it could mean! If a Teiryn and an Edonaris should wed, there might be an end to this senseless feuding. Our families would be forced to come to terms!” (p. 17). Sounds like Friar Lawrence’s reasoning, doesn’t it? Then I am reminded of Hamlet here: “Nyctasia’s dagger lashed out wildly, barely scratching his hand, but a burning pain seared through his arm, leaving it numb. In moments, the poison reached his heart, and he was dead before he fell to the ground” (p. 27). The way the poison on Laertes’ unbated foil worked quickly on Hamlet through a minor wound, right? And then there is the character Nyctasia disguising herself as a boy, and having a girl attracted to her (p. 46), as in As You Like It and Twelfth Night.
Silverglass was published in 1986.
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