Join us on the SOF Facebook page for the third annual Shakespeare Authorship Mystery Day on Friday, November 8! We’ll be hosting live authorship talks with Q&A.
Bring your questions and chat with other doubters and authorship-curious visitors!
2:00 EST / 11:00 PST Tom Townsend: Finding the True Shakespeare from an Historical Standpoint
3:30 EST / 12:30 PST Tom Regnier: Hamlet and the Law of Homicide: What This Tells Us about Authorship
Shakespeare Authorship Mystery Day commemorates the initial publication of the First Folio on November 8, 1623 and recognizes the steadily growing global doubts about the traditional story of Shakespeare’s authorship. The day is an annual opportunity for all authorship doubters — whether they support a particular candidate as the true Bard, or simply doubt the traditional Stratfordian theory of authorship — to amplify their voices and raise the visibility of the Shakespeare authorship question.
The celebration provides a platform for those studying the authorship question to promote their work and increase curiosity about the true authorship of Shakespeare’s plays and poems.
Some ways to celebrate Shakespeare Authorship Mystery Day on November 8:
- Join us on Facebook for live talks from 2pm to 4:30pm Eastern
- Like and Share the SOF’s Shakespeare Authorship Mystery Day social media posts
- Post your favorite Shakespeare authorship question books, videos, articles, etc. on your social media channels throughout the day
- Encourage your friends to sign the Declaration of Reasonable Doubt: https://doubtaboutwill.org/declaration
- Share the best evidence for your candidate
- Point to blogs and websites that provide more information
- Encourage students to ask their English literature and history teachers about the Shakespeare authorship question
- Use the hashtag #ShakespeareAuthorshipMysteryDay
- Read Shakespeare and toast the immortal Bard