Folio Society's complete collection of Shakespeare's Plays.

Folio Society's complete collection of Shakespeare's Plays. Illustrated, comes with a slip-case, limited to 1,000 hand-numbered sets.

$1500

Whose buying it?

https://www.foliosociety.com/usa/the-complete-plays.html

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  1. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/search/?query=shakespear&submit_search=Go%21

  2. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I thought about buying their 8 volume set but I don't need it
    I'm building a collection of Arden, Penguin and Signet Shakespeare

  3. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    It’s probably nice, but I’d never spend that on it. I like my Riverside a lot, and it gets the job done.

  4. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Modern Folio editions don't even look good. There's a guy in Dublin who sells old second hand ones for €20 each, absolute peak literature experience.

  5. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Does it come with a free fedora?
    I bought a single-volume edition of Shakespeare's complete works in paperback from a thrift store. Best £2.99 I ever spent.
    You do know his works are out of copyright? Only a moron would pay a premium for them.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      >I bought a single-volume edition of Shakespeare's complete works in paperback from a thrift store. Best £2.99
      I did the same for the same price online lol, a beautiful red hardback oxford complete edition. I guess there's a moron born every minute.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      >I bought a single-volume edition of Shakespeare's complete works in paperback from a thrift store. Best £2.99
      I did the same for the same price online lol, a beautiful red hardback oxford complete edition. I guess there's a moron born every minute.

      Imagine being so poor and proud of being thrifty

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        moronic arriviste trash. Right now, there's a beautiful first edition of a certain 17th-century tome up on abebooks for the same price that actually would signal status since you're so desperate to.

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          Old books are gross

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            This
            They've always got foxing on the pages, yellowed to shit, disintegrating with a terrible smell the leather cover just barely holding together but parts of it come off when you touch it
            Disgusting

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            Yeah plus people will just think you raided your dead grandfather’s estate sale, not a big dick status buy

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          I'm not desperate. You're the penny pinch who makes his acquisitions topic of conversation; I let mine speak for themselves.

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous
  6. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    you're disgusting if you buy that

  7. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I bet it isn't even signed.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      It's signed by the illustrator so the-....OH, funny joke! You funny guy~

  8. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    ITT anons don’t recognize that it is a status buy. They probably wouldn’t know of such things

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      If you need to buy status, it's because you don't have real status.

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        No, it’s just to signal it

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      How is buying a pricey (but not fine press!) box of Shakespeare going to boost status? Shakespeare isn't going to impress anyone because it's the most generic "cultured" pick possible, like getting into French cuisine, Bach, champagne and Rolex watches after getting some money.

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        Because those things are expensive and poor people don’t own them

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          Wealth can be inherited (and usually is). It is no indicator of worth or status.

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            Money is money. If you have it you have status

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        Bach is only midwit if you only know his small ensemble pieces. You can tell someone's a big brain if they know a lot of his organ works.

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          yea, or if they are actually able to perform and/or analyze the pieces.

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        it's worse for this collection, even.
        it's like buying a fake rolex for status, but paying the price of a real one.

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          FO is a fine press

          And if you disagree, I'm gonna need you to define "fine press"

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            Actually fancy like gilded hardbacks with proper work; gold-ddtailed clothbounds and actually good bookbinding.

            A glorified funko version of a collection with a cardboard "cover" for all the books is just lame.
            and they're asking for such a premium that you could buy an actually important early version for the price.

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            They aren't all 'cardboard' covers
            They do have good bindings
            The paper is excellent
            Gilding is not necessary for all books nor is having gold tooling
            You cannot buy any important editions of Shakespeare for that price at least not in readable condition

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            >You cannot buy any important editions of Shakespeare for that price at least not in readable condition
            also affirming that yours is a frivolous one and therefore not worth the price.

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            I do not consider the importance of a volume to be something that I particularly value
            For example, I would rather have a clean edition of a hardback than a first edition of a hardback for the same price
            All I care about is the price and whether the materials and conditions of the book are good

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            easily found without paying a premium of about 100 times the cost of making it.
            Alongside the fake "scarcity" of the folios.
            it's literally funko pops but for books.

          • 8 months ago
            Anonymous

            Well the thing is, the fact that they're the only ones producing this specific book at this level of quality does allow them to gouge a bit
            If I want a multivolume set (but not individual plays) of Shakespeare that is well made I don't have many choices and therefore Folio Society can charge me more
            Ok so lets take your point about fake scarcity
            Firstly the appeal as far as I can see with Funko pops is purely with their scarcity, they do not have any real value in comparison to say, the Japanese statue companies
            Folio society have the quality as a part of their appeal as well as the scarcity (unfortunately)
            Secondly with the limited edition runs, I'm pretty sure they're all done by lower throughput companies who don't mass produce their books in the same way that Folio books typically are, but I may be wrong about that
            t. have 4 folio society books that I bought for $4, $4, $8 and $15 and only used Shakespeare editions in my collection

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      It's not even a status buy, it's just a way for people with disposable income to spend more of their money. Materialism has rotted people's brains to the point where they feel obligated to consume whenever they have the money for it, no matter how illogical the purchase is. It's the same mindset that drug addicts have.

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        What do you suppose they should do with their money? Deny themselves and hoard it indefinitely? Moreover, spending it is good for the economy so they're also keeping the 'sensible' types like you afloat.

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          >Why shouldn't I spend a quarter of my income on alcohol? It's not like I'm using the money for anything else, and drinking makes me feel good 🙂
          Buy a used collection for $5 and donate the rest if you're so eager to empty your pockets. Same books, and rather than feed the economy that's buck breaking you your money will be helping actual people

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          Invest or spend it productively and spend the rest on creating memories with friends and family. conspicuous consumption is middle class Black personmmagpie brain.
          There's a book called bobos In Paradise that covers this phenomena, basically the sort of chump that would laugh at a poor family spending £5k on a TV but would then spend £20k on a slate lined bathroom or first editions.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Buying a modern reprint """"""first"""""""" edition isn't a status buy. It's a basedboy funkopop purchase.

      A status buy would be buying an original folio of Shakespeare's works, or editions printed in the 17th century.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous
    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      >literally the kind of people that buy brands instead of quality

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      >status
      >not a fine press actually fancy edition
      >shitty moneygrab for people who buy fake "status" with brands

  9. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    This looks extremely gaudy, even by modern Folio Society standards.

  10. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I just want properly made books

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      You would have to buy vintage (good deals exist but are time consuming to find) or fine press ($$$)

  11. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    If they purified it from Shakespeare’s rambling sexism and reworded sections to challenge the bard's disgusting underrepresentation of coloureds and trannies, I might.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      One has to wonder what goes on in the mind of posters like this. An extremely waste of time for the person who typed this and everybody whos reads it

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Extremely waste of time
        Nice job Shakespeare

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        It is the adrenaline rush you get from baiting people but I doubt he gets many (You)s based on this post

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          The false flag bait gives a rush? It’s the passive aggressive way. You aren’t even saying what you want to say

  12. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I demand that Caesar be made a woman named Caesarina – very sure of herself, at peace with her obesity, incapable of heeding any advice made by a man, and bi - and Richard III, a black man who fled his imprisonment and, by sponsoring equality of opportunity and all-embracing land reform, was chosen by cretinous whites – there are no other sort of Caucasians - to be the king. The Plantagenets are now to be known as the Blacktagenets.

  13. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I hate this.

    Because I know if I had the money, I would waste it on stupid shit like this

  14. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    That slipcase looks THICC

  15. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    that looks like one of those awful Barns and Nobel hardcovers. Is Folio Society run by trannies now or something? Why are all their new releases so ugly?

  16. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Only if its in Elephant hide

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      What the absolute frick am I looking at?

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Filtered by a dumb meme image

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        You had to be there.

  17. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I bought a single book paperback for literally two British pounds. Words are words.

  18. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    >needing anything beyond the Pelican Shakespeare

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      How much does a good copy cost?

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        Retails new for over $60, but I got mine for $15.

  19. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    I bought a hardback single volume complete collection of Shakespeare's plays from barnes and noble for $8. You're a moron if you buy that.

  20. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    No. If they were leather bound and had a treasure of annotations and supplements then maybe. I wouldn’t pay that much for books that don’t look beautiful and whose chief supplement is illustrations unless they somehow managed to contract William Blake from the dead or something.

  21. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    But I've already got my Collins' 1973 edition of 'The Complete Works of William Shakespeare', in red hardback with illustrations by Eric Fraser, that my granddad bought for £1 from a book sale at his local bowls pavilion

    >pic not mine, but the same copy

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Is he trying to suck a dick

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        no, but I gladly will (for a fee)

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Shouldn't there be an illustration-protection paper in-between?

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        no it makes it harder to eat

  22. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    It's interesting that they switched from using the Oxford text for their 8 volume edition of Shakespeare to using the Arden text for this one

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      When you upgrade the case, you should also upgrade the stock

  23. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    for me it's oxford shakespeare

  24. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    >$875.00

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Edge staining is an unforgivable crime

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's fine when done well, but yes, I agree that the Folio's staining looks like fricking neon highlighter

  25. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Folio has released like 50 different versions of the complete Shakespeare. Just because it's 1 of 1000 doesn't really mean it's exclusive. You're better off spending $20 on this:
    https://www.amazon.com/Complete-Works-William-Shakespeare-Cambridge/dp/B0024JG5AO

  26. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Norton Critical if the source material and/or essays are of interest; Signet Classic paperback otherwise. Simple as.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Signet

  27. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Why are the covers and case so ugly?

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      I find them quite handsome, not sure what your problem is

  28. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Artificial scarcity. No thank you.

    I own one Folio Society set of books - Plutarch's Parallel Lives. They are presented chronologically instead of in parallel, which defeats the entire purposes of the set. Folio Society can go frick themselves. I have no interest in their funco books.

  29. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    What is it about these "fancy" editions that makes IQfy lose their collective mind?

  30. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Single volume Complete Shakespeare, what edition should I go for? Norton Critical? RSC? Riverside? Alexander? Arden? Does it really matter or should i just get the cheapest one?

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      If I was doing it all over again I would get individual plays because the complete works is too cumbersome unless you are reading at a desk, and plus many superfluous plays like the histories are shit and don’t need to be read

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        >many superfluous plays like the histories are shit and don’t need to be read
        Wow. How wrong you are. Without the Henrys we would have no Falstaff, and Falstaff is one of the great Shakespearean characters.

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        moron take

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Norton is fine
      Some people hate it but for the price (I paid $10 for mine in perfect condition) it is worth having
      The Riverside is better but not for significantly more than $30-40
      Also the Arden is just the plain text although it is the highest quality book in terms of the binding

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Pelican for single-volume, Arden for individuals.

  31. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    >limited to 1,000 hand-numbered sets
    Numbered by Shakespeare himself? If not, who cares about hand numbering? Absolute nonsense.

  32. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    The old riverside prints are like $40 and look nicer on a shelf.

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      >riverside
      >nice

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        Yes, Riverside, nice, thanks for repeating that back to me

  33. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Just buy a copy of Shakespeare from the 1800s off ebay. Its age gives it more worth than a stupid modern "limited edition."

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Go ahead and type in "Shakespeare 1800s" into Ebay, look at those prices, then tell me you're not a israelite

      • 8 months ago
        Anonymous

        I did so.
        >$21.95 is a israeli price

        • 8 months ago
          Anonymous

          I said what I said, David

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Books from the 1800’s are gross

  34. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Depends. Is it made from Elephant Hide?

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Still can’t even fathom what they were thinking with that? Just pure English pride?

  35. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    Buy an ad.

  36. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    It's letter pressed and is silk covered. Overpriced but not by much.
    I'd only make sense if you're a rich prick who wants to pretend he's sophisticated or are obsessed with Shakespeare

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      I’ve always seen Folios and fine press or collector editions as for those writers and books you cherish

  37. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    What is the cheapest price I can pay for a book made in this way?

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      About tree fiddy

    • 8 months ago
      Anonymous

      Letterpressed? Suntup's Charlie and the chocolate factory for $200.
      The average letterpressed book will cost you $1000-$2000, due to the process, pages and materials used.
      Look at suntup press's lettered editions for good examples of such books. They put far more attention to the materials used and design at that range of books than Folio.

      For general cloth bounded books with good papers and binding, it is as cheap as £40 from folio, though usually costs £120-200.

  38. 8 months ago
    Anonymous

    What IS the best Edition of Shakespeare's complete works, then.

    And I mean a feasible not ludicrously expensive one.

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