Following Brenda Jamess discovery of the true identity of the writer of Shakespeares works, Henry Neville, John Casson has applied this to apocryphal works with startling results. He has thus discovered:
Nevilles first nom-de-plume (before he used the name Shakespeare); Shakespeare-Nevilles first published poem: the Phaeton sonnet; Shakespeare-Nevilles first comedy: Mucedorus; Shakespeare-Nevilles first tragedies: Locrine and Arden of Faversham; Shakespeare-Nevilles first Falstaff: ten years before the Henry IV plays.
Dr. Casson also explores Thomas of Woodstock and A Yorkshire...
Following Brenda Jamess discovery of the true identity of the writer of Shakespeares works, Henry Neville, John Casson has applied this to apocryphal ...
As Christmas 1958 approaches Mr James is preparing his bookshop for the festive season. But when a mysterious homeless man gives him a beautifully carved music box, peculiar things begin to develop that take him back to his childhood and to the girl he once loved. But why does the homeless man seem so familiar? and what are the meanings behind the exquisite carvings? As the long winter nights draw in, Mr James travels back to his past and tries to understand the gift that will change his life forever.
As Christmas 1958 approaches Mr James is preparing his bookshop for the festive season. But when a mysterious homeless man gives him a beautifully car...
Much Ado About Noting provides new evidence concerning the authorship of the works of Shakespeare. Dr John Casson examines documents written by Henry Neville. By matching handwriting and vocabulary, Casson shows these are connected with three other 'Shakespeare' manuscripts. He has also discovered a new early play by Shakespeare: Look About You, a political comedy
Much Ado About Noting provides new evidence concerning the authorship of the works of Shakespeare. Dr John Casson examines documents written by Henry ...
Who wrote the works of Shakespeare? Revealing newly discovered evidence, John Casson and William D. Rubinstein definitively answer this question, presenting the case that the man from Stratford simply did not have the education, cultural background and breadth of life experience necessary for him to write the plays traditionally attributed to him. Instead, the most credible candidate is Sir Henry Neville, who certainly did have all the necessary qualifications. A colourful Renaissance man educated at Merton College, Oxford, Neville's life experience precisely matches that revealed in the...
Who wrote the works of Shakespeare? Revealing newly discovered evidence, John Casson and William D. Rubinstein definitively answer this question, pres...