Mary Jane Meeker: How I Became an Oxfordian
Several years ago I read a column by Joseph Sobran. I could tell he was really upset when he explained that the man he had
Several years ago I read a column by Joseph Sobran. I could tell he was really upset when he explained that the man he had
It all started because I was feeling sorry for myself. I now spend most of my time writing: novels, plays, and articles—everything except poetry, in
It is a habit of mine to note, with each book I buy, the date of purchase on its first blank page. And so I
I am 90 years old and continue to be an ardent believer in Edward De Vere as the real Shakespeare. I was a business major
Forty years ago, when I was an undergraduate at the Australian National University’s Chifley library, I happened to notice a fascinating collection of old books
At Tower Books on Watt Avenue in Sacramento, I first spotted Charlton Ogburn’s The Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Myth and the Reality, in a stack
July 6, 2016 Not long out of high school, while watching Kevin Kline’s Hamlet on PBS with the father of a school friend, he said
Names often add or lose letters or syllables through the generations. My father was Rollin R. DeVere Sr.; I’m Jr; my son is III. My
I had never heard of Edward de Vere. I was in the first place interested in Hamlet. Possibly I was too benumbed, as many people
I came to discover the Shakespearean Authorship Question when I was in grade 9. For me, the most enticing thing about it was the
Here is another classic from our files. This article was originally published in the Summer 1983 issue of our newsletter. I was never a Stratfordian.
May 31, 2016 It was thanks to the New York Times. Much as I admire the important books by Mark Anderson, Thomas Looney, Charlton Ogburn
When I was in Law School at Aberystwyth on the rugged western coast of Wales, it was an occasional delight to drive in summer to
“Why would anybody believe it?” The teenaged girl’s eyes were wide, her head shaking. She’d come to the front of the school auditorium to speak
It was in third form of grammar school in 1964 when my English (Language and Literature) teacher, Joost de Lange announced: “Now we have to
It was the first showing of PBS Frontline; “The Shakespeare Mystery” in 1989. I was living in Santa Cruz, California, it was just after the
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