<B><b>“A wickedly entertaining” (<i>The </i><i>New York Times</i>) detective story that chronicles one Mississippi man’s relentless search for an authentic portrait of William Shakespeare.</b></B><BR><BR>Following his divorce, down-and-out writer and Mississippi exile Lee Durkee holed himself up in a Vermont fishing shack and fell prey to a decades-long obsession with Shakespearian portraiture. It began with a simple premise: despite the prevalence of popular portraits, no one really knows what Shakespeare looked like. That the Bard of Avon has gotten progressively handsomer in modern depictions seems only to reinforce this point.<BR><BR>“Intensely readable…with bust-out laughing moments” (<I>Garden & Gun</I>),<I> Stalking Shakespeare</I> is Durkee’s fascinating memoir about a hobby gone awry, the 400-year-old myriad portraits attached to the famous playwright, and Durkee’s own unrelenting search for a lost picture of the Bard painted f