Shakespeare did not write any books. He wrote plays, and lots of poetry, but he never wrote any books.
he used samalayuca books
none. Shakespeare wrote poems, but they weren't collected into a book until after his death
He did not write any haiku, limericks or how-to instruction books. For A+ the answer is Melodramas TAO
William Shakespeare wrote 37 plays and 154 sonnets! Books? I'm not so sure.
He did not write any haiku, limericks or how-to instruction books.
John Quincy Adams has written: 'The heroes of the American revolution' -- subject(s): Fourth of July orations
i dont know you lot have the answer's you should be telling me honestly
Since everything Shakespeare wrote has at some time or another been published in book form, from one perspective he certainly did write books. Indeed he intended some of it, especially his long poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece to be published in book form.What you mean possibly is: "Why did William Shakespeare not write novels?" The reason is that novels were at that time a new form of writing that was rare and not fully developed. There was no money in them. Plays on the other hand were what Shakespeare was paid to write.
Shakespeare did not write books as we would understand the meaning of the term--something written for the purpose of being published--apart from his two long poems. His inspiration for writing them was that the theatres were closed for health reasons, and he had to make money somehow. Venus and Adonis is semi-pornographic, which no doubt helped sales. Shakespeare made good money off of it.
None. Shakespeare was not a bookseller. He did write a couple of books with the express purpose of offering them for sale. They were poems called Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. He arranged to have them published and sold by an old friend from Stratford, Richard Field.
Is this a question? William Shakespeare did write his plays.