None. Shakespeare was not a publisher, and was only involved in the publication of his poems Venus and Adonis in 1593 and The Rape of Lucrece in 1594 and his collection of Sonnets in 1609. Shakespeare did not write anything which might remotely be described as a "story book". His only connection with such literature is that he appears to have read some stories or story books such as the Decameron.
Ronald McDonald
Shakespeare got the ideas for virtually all of his stories from books he had read. Very few of his plots are original. The Comedy of Errors is based on an old Latin play, for example.
A comedy (story/play) by William Shakespeare
at the end
Thomas Creede in 1599 published the popular second quarto. The first quarto was published in 1597 by John Danter. The play was part of the First Folio, published by John Heminges and Henry Condell and printed by Isaac Jaggard and Edward Blount in 1623. Since then it has been published innumerable times.
The first published poem by William Shakespeare was "Venus and Adonis," which was published in 1593. It is a narrative poem that tells the story of the seduction of the goddess Venus by the mortal Adonis.
Probably Hamlet
Ronald McDonald
Anthony and Cleopatra by William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare got the ideas for virtually all of his stories from books he had read. Very few of his plots are original. The Comedy of Errors is based on an old Latin play, for example.
A comedy (story/play) by William Shakespeare
yes
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
at the end
He did not. William Shakespeare did not write novels. They were an unknown form in his day. Shakespeare wrote plays which is a totally different literary form. The plots for his plays were almost all taken from stories or history books or biographies he had read or plays by other people which he had seen. He made changes in these plots but he started out with a story he got from somewhere else.
From Arthur Brooke's poem Romeus and Juliet.
I'm pretty sure it's William Shakespeare.