Filling a scholarly niche, Baker conducts a larger, more comprehensively theological survey of the Shakespearean oeuvre and its religious context than have comparable works....The book assumes no prior knowledge of 16th-century theology or religious controversy, and therefore will be useful and accessible for those new to the subject, yet it manages to survey the relevant analytical categories and sources in a way that will interest more specialized readers. In chapters on religion in Shakespeare's world, in the Shakespearean oeuvre, in the performance of Shakespeare's plays, and in Shakespearean scholarship and criticism, the author succinctly summarizes what is known, debated, or conceivable about the theology in both Shakespeare's age and his works. In 56 supplemental pages, Baker offers primary documents, including excerpts from William Tyndale's New Testament, The Act for Uniformity, the Elizabethan Book of Common Prayer, John Foxe's Actes and Monuments, and the religious poems of Edmund Spenser and John Donne. Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, general readers. - Choice