
Joan Gabrie Storms Local Library: An Oxfordian Call-to-Arms
“What burns me so is not so much the original fraud, but the continuing campaign to discredit Oxford and suppress the facts.” Recently, Shakespeare Oxford
Exploring the evidence that the works of Shakespeare were written by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford

“What burns me so is not so much the original fraud, but the continuing campaign to discredit Oxford and suppress the facts.” Recently, Shakespeare Oxford

Starting at the beginning: In College I enjoyed literature and was thinking of making it my minor study. Shakespeare was virtually the only author without

“The absence of the author has brought about an absolute tragedy . . . .” by Theresa Lauricella Award-winning poet Chris Pannell, editor of The

Justice Antonin Scalia (1936–2016), Justice John Paul Stevens (1920–2019), and Other Authorship Skeptics on America’s Highest Court by Bryan H. Wildenthal Published on the SOF website

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

July 13, 2016 Professor Bryan H. Wildenthal of Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego, in “Remembering Rollett and Debunking Shapiro (Again),” an article

by Bryan H. Wildenthal July 13, 2016 On June 29, 2016, the New York Times once again gave a platform to a Stratfordian academic to

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

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

In his opening paragraph, James Ross describes John de Vere, thirteenth Earl of Oxford, as “the last great medieval nobleman.” He continues…
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