Fool (novel)

Fool is the eleventh novel by Christopher Moore, released on February 10, 2009.

The novel takes its premise from the plot of Shakespeare's play King Lear, narrated from the perspective of the character of the Fool, whose name is Pocket.

In the course of the novel are references to other Shakespeare plays, ranging from short quotations to whole characters—most notably the three witches from Macbeth. While the style of Fool is directed at an American audience, the author incorporates at times Shakespearean vocabulary, archaic syntax, and modern British slang, and obscure cultural terms relating to medieval life, which are explained in footnotes. In addition, Moore invents humorous British-style place-names for fictitious locations in the story.

This novel was followed by a sequel, The Serpent of Venice, released in 2014, which combines characters and plot elements from Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice and Othello, and Poe's The Cask of Amontillado, while keeping the perspective of Pocket.

Fool

Fool, The Fool, or Fools may refer to:

  • A bouffon, a clown, a harlequin, a jester
  • Fool, The Fool, or Fools may also refer to:

    Theatre

  • Fool (stock character), in literature and folklore
  • Shakespearean fool, an archetypal character in numerous works by Shakespeare
  • Fools Guild, a social club of comedic performers
  • Games and Tarot

  • The Fool (Tarot card), a Tarot card
  • Literature

  • The Fool (Raffi novel), 1880
  • The Fool, by H. C. Bailey 1927
  • Fool (novel), a 2009 novel by Christopher Moore
  • Fools (play), a 1981 play by Neil Simon
  • The Fool (fictional character), a fictional character in The Realm of the Elderlings by Robin Hobb
  • The Fool (play), a 1975 play by the English playwright Edward Bond
  • Food

  • Fruit fool, a dish made with cooked fruit
  • Ful medames (variant spelling)
  • Film

  • Fools (film), a 1970 American film
  • The Fool (1990 film), a 1990 British film
  • Fools (2003 film), a 2003 Indian film directed by Dasari Narayana Rao
  • The Fool (2014 film), a 2014 Russian film
  • Music

  • The Fool (design collective), a Dutch design collective and band influential in the psychedelic style of art in the 1960s
  • Jester

    A jester, court jester or fool was historically an entertainer during the medieval and Renaissance eras who was a member of the household of a nobleman employed to entertain him and his guests. A jester was also an itinerant performer who entertained common folk at fairs and markets. Jesters are also modern day entertainers who resemble their historical counterparts. Jesters in medieval times are often thought to have worn brightly coloured clothes and eccentric hats in a motley pattern and their modern counterparts usually mimic this costume. In medieval times jesters entertained with a wide variety of skills: principal ones included songs, music, and storytelling; additional ones included acrobatics, juggling, telling jokes, and magic. Much of the entertainment was performed in a comic style and many jesters made contemporary jokes in word or song about people or events well known to their audiences.

    Etymology

    The modern use of the English word jester did not come into use until the mid-16th century during Tudor times. This modern term derives from the older form gestour, or jestour, originally from Anglo-Norman (French) meaning story-teller or minstrel. Other earlier terms included fol, disour, and bourder. These terms described entertainers who differed in their skills and performances but who all shared many similarities in their role as comedic performers for their audiences.

    Fool (stock character)

    There are several distinct, although overlapping categories of fool as a stock character in creative works (literature, film, etc.) and folklore: simpleton fool, clever fool, and serendipitous fool.

    Silly fool

    A silly, stupid, simpleton, luckless fool is a butt of numerous jokes and tales all over the world.

    Sometimes the foolishness is ascribed to a whole place, as exemplified by the Wise Men of Gotham. The localizing of fools is common to most countries, and there are many other reputed imbecile centres in England besides Gotham. Thus there are the people of Coggeshall, Essex, the "carles" of Austwick, Yorkshire, the "gowks" of Gordon, Berwickshire, and for many centuries the charge of folly has been made against silly Suffolk and Norfolk (Descriptio Norfolciensium about twelfth century, printed in Wright's Early Mysteries and other Latin Poems).

    In Germany there are the "Schildburgers", from the fictitious town of "Schilda"; in the Netherlands, the people of Kampen; in Bohemia, the people of Kocourkov; and in Moravia the people of Šimperk. There are also the Swedish Täljetokar from Södertälje and Kälkborgare from Kälkestad, and the Danish tell tales of the foolish inhabitants of the Molboland. In Latin America, the people of Galicia are the butt of many jokes. In Spain, the people of Lepe, a town in Andalusia, follow a similar fate. Among the ancient Greeks, Boeotia was the home of fools; among the Thracians, Abdera; among the ancient Jews, Nazareth; among modern Jews, Chełm; among the ancient Asiatics, Phrygia.

    Moon of Israel (novel)

    Moon of Israel is a novel by Rider Haggard, first published in 1918 by John Murray. The novel narrates the events of the Biblical Exodus from Egypt told from the perspective of a scribe named Ana.

    Haggard dedicated his novel to Sir Gaston Maspero, a distinguished Egyptologist and director of Cairo Museum.

    Adaptation

    His novel was the basis of a script by Ladislaus Vajda, for film-director Michael Curtiz in his 1924 Austrian epic known as Die Sklavenkönigin, or "Queen of the Slaves".

    References

    External links

  • Moon of Israel at Project Gutenberg

  • Novel (disambiguation)

    A novel is a long prose narrative.

    Novel may also refer to:

  • Novel (album), an album by Joey Pearson
  • Novel (film), a 2008 Malayalam film
  • Novel (musician) (born 1981), American hip-hop artist
  • The Novel, a 1991 novel by James A. Michener
  • Novel, Haute-Savoie, a commune in eastern France
  • Novels (Roman law), a term for a new Roman law in the Byzantine era
  • Novel, Inc., a video game studio and enterprise simulation developer
  • Novellae Constitutiones or The Novels, laws passed by Byzantine Emperor Justinian I
  • Novel: A Forum on Fiction, an academic journal
  • Novel, a minor musical side project of Adam Young
  • See also

  • Novell, a software company
  • Novella (disambiguation)
  • 1633 (novel)

    1633 is an alternate history novel co-written by Eric Flint and David Weber, and sequel to 1632 in the 1632 series. 1633 is the second major novel in the series and together with the anthology Ring of Fire, the two sequels begin the series hallmarks of being a shared universe with collaborative writing being very common, as well as one—far more unusual— which mixes many canonical anthologies with its works of novel length. This in part is because Flint wrote 1632 as a stand-alone novel, though with enough "story hooks" for an eventual sequel, and because Flint feels "history is messy", and the books reflect that real life is not a smooth polished linear narrative flow from the pen of some historian, but is instead clumps of semi-related or unrelated happenings that somehow sum together where different people act in their own self-interests.

    Premise

    The series begins in the Modern era on May 31, 2000, during a small town wedding when the small West Virginia town of Grantville trades places in both time and geographic location with a nearly unpopulated countryside region within the Holy Roman Empire during the convulsions of the Thirty Years' War.

    Podcasts:

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    Latest News for: fool (novel)

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    Is Coben the luckiest author alive? Not only is this as-yet-untitled new Witherspoon novel going well, his 36th solo thriller Nobody’s Fool will be published this week.
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    I Want a Date With Jana Hocking

    The American Spectator 09 Mar 2025
    What I like about her particular style of column writing is that getting drunk and fooling around with cute guys is just part of her job ... One of the waitresses loves to fool around with me (and everyone else, but I like to think not).
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    ITV Studios scores record profits despite strikes hitting revenues

    This is Money 06 Mar 2025
    Among the division's successful shows were the thriller series Fool Me Once, starring Michelle Keegan, the Disney+ adaptation of Jilly Cooper's novel Rivals, and Mr Bates vs the Post Office, the UK's most-watched TV drama of 2024.�.
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    ITV Studios scores record profits despite strikes hitting revenues | This is Money

    The Daily Mail 06 Mar 2025
    Among the division's successful shows were the thriller series Fool Me Once, starring Michelle Keegan, the Disney+ adaptation of Jilly Cooper's novel Rivals, and Mr Bates vs the Post Office, the UK's most-watched TV drama of 2024 ... Popular ... .
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    What's on? Top 10 TV and streaming tips for Wednesday

    RTE 05 Mar 2025
    This is the latest Harlan Coben novel to be transformed into a Netflix drama, following in the footsteps of hits such as The Stranger, Fool Me Once and Stay Close.
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