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In The King and the Adulteress, Italian psychoanalyst Roberto Speziale-Bagliacca takes two of Western culture's most enduring works, Shakespeare's King Lear and Flaubert's Madame Bovary and applies his science to their art. Certainly this makes for an interesting academic exercise--Speziale-Bagliacca speculates about Lear's insecurity and Charles and Emma's relationship--but does it add either understanding or enjoyment to our experience of these works of art? In the end, the fate of mad King Lear bellowing his rage and despair on a storm-tossed moor makes perfect psychological sense without the psychoanalysis. Still, for a different take on what made Emma Bovary or Lear tick, The King and the Adulteress might be of interest.