What annoys me much more about Shakespeare is that the fuddy-duddy Oxford and Cambridge academics resolutely refuse to address the many well-documented anomalies of Shakespeare's life which just don't fit on any level with his supposed literary genius (only six copies of his signature surviving from more than 30 plays, and all spelt differently, indicating not a great deal of personal interest in standardization of spelling; several daughters given no form of education whatever, indicating no personal value placed on the hugely wide historic, geographic, and folk-tale knowledge which he somehow repeatedly exhibited himself over 40 years, etc, etc). Most importantly, there are in fact a number of very succint arguments that the majority of the plays, if not all of them, were actually written by the educated, learned, travelled and highly respected courtier Francis Bacon, who may have had political reasons of his own to avoid publishing plays for the masses under his own name. For me, most of the plays are utterly wonderful, especially where they belong - on the stage. But the academic side of Shakespeare research still leaves much to be desired.