I don't know where to start -
The Brave Vessel is so worth reading - I finished it over the weekend and was blown away - there are pages of notes and many pages to the Bibliography - he visited all the places in the story and reads just about every Shakespeare Bio - what he explains is how Shakespeare went about writing - how every play in order to be a paying success on stage had to be performed for the King - how there were three theaters each with their own dynamics and therefore, plays were written and adjusted for one theater versus another -
The Tempest was written for The Blackfriars Theatre (a dissolved 13th-century Dominican monastery that held an audience of a little over 500) although later, played at the Globe before the fire -
He had his ear to the ground to know what was the talk of the day in London and used to assure a play that would interest the paying population as well as, it had to please the king and why
the Tempest has a marriage scene since King James' daughter was betrothed to marry the following year - on and on, If I had time I would type out here for us this exposé.
Shakespeare did have a patron which I did not know - there were a few other authors that influenced this work - like Michel de Montaigne especially his essay
On The Cannibals that you can read excerpt in this Amazon copy of his work
http://www.amazon.com/Michel-Montaigne-Complete-Penguin-Classics/dp/0140446044/ref=pd_sim_b_1#reader_0140446044We learn what the New World represents to the people in light of the Reformation and how with the recent availability of printing the Virginia Company of London markets their investment keeping the bad news out of circulation when they can and countering the stories of returning sailors and colonists. These untruths help to fire Shakespeare's tale to show humanity does not leave its dark side when it seeks and inhabits a so called Paradise free from the shackles of Europe's past.
Some of the information was so new I had to look more closely at the author and read all the notes he includes to assure myself he was not just assuming yet another new slant to Shakespeare. I've just started to read
Shakespeare's The Tempest Its Political Implications and the First Colonists of Virginia by Shahzad Z. Najmuddin Copywrite 2005 and so far he writes similar information. His Bibliography does not include Woodward therefore, his research was separate.
Here is the Washington Post review of the book
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/17/AR2009071701098.htmlHere is a write-up about the author, Hobson Woodward
http://www.simmons.edu/gradstudies/programs/dual/success/487.phpThe book can be downloaded on your kindle - however, the book can be purchased at Amazon for a penny plus the 3.99 shipping and if you have Prime the shipping is free.
http://www.amazon.com/Brave-Vessel-Castaways-Jamestown-ShakespearesThe/dp/B002XULXTC/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1347307235&sr=8-1&keywords=a+brave+vesselI knew nothing about this play and now I cannot wait to actually read the play knowing so much more about the story behind the play and how Shakespeare went about his work - This tie in to American history and the unfolding of Shakespeare at work has captured my curiosity.