Book Summary and Reviews of If This Be Magic by Daniel Hahn

If This Be Magic by Daniel Hahn

If This Be Magic

The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation

by Daniel Hahn

  • Critics' Consensus (6):
  • Published:
  • Apr 2026, 416 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

How does Shakespeare remain Shakespeare when every word is changed? In this playful, meditative exploration of translating the world's most beloved playwright, Daniel Hahn guides us through the magic of bringing the Bard to a global audience.

Shakespeare may have breathed the air of sixteenth-century England, but today, all the world is his stage. Every year, millions of people, from Bogotá to Borneo, read Hamlet for the first time, thanks to the tireless work of translators. Drawing on the work of the very best of them, Hahn dives into the infinitesimally complicated ways the great playwright is reinvented and yet sounds, somehow, like himself—in Chinese, Dutch, Turkish, and more than a hundred other languages.

From word order, puns, and punctuation to metaphor, accent, and song, Shake­speare's variety of genius presents an endless set of conundrums, among them: How does Romeo and Juliet's love story unfold if their dialogue cannot form a son­net (nor rhyme), as it does in the original? How can you form wordplay around the letter "I" and its sound if its meanings are not shared in other languages? These are just two out of millions of issues facing translators tasked with bringing Shakespeare to non-English languages, non-Shakespearean eras and cultures. To attempt such a feat, they must cut and add beats, maintain rhymes, adapt names and locations, and preserve meaning while not unilaterally prioritizing it, all while knowing that for each word, line, or scene they construct, another option is yet to be discovered.

Traveling the world, Hahn speaks to writers and actors engaging with Shake­speare's work, sharing stories of his own. Hahn, whose great-grandfather produced one of Brazil's earliest Shakespeare translations, emerges as a wise and enthusiastic guide, teacher, and sleuth. If This Be Magic does not require knowledge of any other language or more than a passing acquaintance with the Bard's canon, but it draws out fascinating insights on both. As nerdy as they come (there is a chapter on commas), supremely readable, and funny throughout, this is a book for everyone and a fitting tribute to the Globe's Bard.

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"Hahn is a brilliant literary translator, and his book offers a grand and very enjoyable tour of Shakespeare in the worlds of other words... . A tour de force analysis... . Every page brims with discoveries, yet Hahn's tone remains modest—and refreshingly droll... . Readers thinking they know Shakespeare will find something new here... . A uniquely ebullient account of world translators seeking to make Shakespeare their own." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"[A] lively exploration... . Hahn's delight in linguistic possibility is evident throughout, particularly when he challenges the notion of 'untranslatable words,' and he keeps the tone delightfully droll... . This is a pleasure for scholars and hobbyist wordsmiths alike." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Meticulous... . Merits multiple readings." —Library Journal (starred review)

"Are Shakespeare's jokes actually funny in French? Why might Hamlet be even longer in Japanese? You will find the answers to these and many more fascinating questions in If This be Magic: The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation. Daniel Hahn is a remarkable translator, writer, and editor, a dedicated supporter of literature and knowledge, and he has written this gem of a book which is clearly the outcome of decades of hard work and dedication, and passion, really, for the art of storytelling." —Elif Shafak, author of There Are Rivers in the Sky

"I've just finished, and loved, If This Be Magic. It's a fresh and vivid way to think about Shakespeare; it's so witty and knowledgeable, so alive to the ways in which language resists reduction. It feels like attending the most fascinating lecture of the term, like learning made swift and sharp and generous." —Katherine Rundell, New York Times bestselling author of Impossible Creatures

This information about If This Be Magic was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

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Author Information

Daniel Hahn

Daniel Hahn is an award-winning translator, writer and editor. His translations include a wide range of fiction and non-fiction from Europe, Africa and the Americas, as well as many children's books and plays. He is the author of Catching Fire: A Translation Diary, the editor of the Oxford Companion to Children's Literature, and co-editor with Padma Viswanathan of the forthcoming Penguin Book of Brazilian Short Stories. He is currently translating an Angolan novel.

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