Most Popular Queries

It’s always fun to look at the search logs.  Since I’ve been tracking it, here are the most popular queries that will land you on ShakespeareGeek: 1)  Romeo’s last words  – Somebody explained this one to me. It’s a popular crossword puzzle clue.  The answer is “I die.” 2) Elizabethan recipes – I’ve never understood the popularity of this one.  I think it’s because I’m one of the few links for it in Google, so there’s little competition.  My stats also show that nobody really goes on to buy anything from the shop mentioned in that post, so maybe it’s just a curiosity?  Who knows. 3) Megan Fox tattoo – It makes me happy that a very hot girl has a tattoo that happens to be a quote from King Lear. 4) How old is Romeo – I’m glad we had a pretty in depth discussion on this one, because it’s one of those indirect questions where you’ve always assumed you had the right answer (Juliet is 13, therefore Romeo must be 13, right?) until you give it some thought and say “You know, it never actually says he’s 13…” 5) Simpsons Hamlet – Who is typing this, ya think?  Simpsons fans who recognize their Shakespeare, or Shakespeare fans who watch The Simpsons?   I’m also intriged by #6, which is in fact “Shakespeare geek“.  Not sure if that was the sort of thing people type anyway, or if they are actually looking for little old me, but I’m happy to see so many links pop up :).

Stand Up For Your Inner Geek

http://www.fray.com/geek/ Quarterly magazine Fray is doing their next issue on “geeks” and looking for contributions.  What’s a geek? We are everywhere:  superfans, wonks, philes, heads, enthusiasts of the sublimely obscue.  We are the people who care too much about something others do not really understand.  We make the world go ’round.  If you’ve ever been into something so much your friends wondered about your sanity, you’re a geek, too. Needless to say I already signed up, proudly declaring myself a Shakespeare geek.  Who’s with me?

Quartos Going Digital

http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,23438755-5001028,00.html Two libraries in Britain and the US plan to reproduce online all 75 editions of William Shakespeare’s plays printed in the quarto format before the year 1641. This is one of those projects that makes me wish I was a grad student someplace, just spending all day combing through every last page looking at the handwritten notes in the margins.  It’s not just that they’re scanning the quartos – the British Library did that with theirs back in 2004 – it’s that each quarto is different, and they are scanning them all. It’s funny that the article says Shakespeare wrote “at least 37 plays.”  I thought the generally held number now was 38 – or aren’t they counting Two Noble Kinsmen, you think?