CURIOUSER & CURIOUSER

The ‘St. Albans’ portrait of Edward de Vere by Marcus Gheeraedts

Enter a new ‘Corner’ where Eeyore is king, and Pooh and Shakespeare navigate a forest labyrinth haunted by old ghosts faced with new challenges – a fanciful read with serious historical implications.

SHAKESPEARE AT POOH CORNER’ contains dozens of ‘Pooh-isms’ and Lewis Carroll’s glorious ‘nonse’ words originally allowed to run free in Alice’s extraordinary adventures behind the looking glass. Descend the rabbit hole beyond the mind to a fantasy world where a changeling princess seeks the life she was denied, and Edward de Vere, a victim of treacherous Elizabethan politics had his literary legacy cut short in 1604.

Yet, happily, against all odds, the 17th Earl of Oxford’s canon, all but trashed under a bogus name and centuries of ersatz Stratfordian ‘Bardology’, continues to spin unabated towards being restored to its rightful creator. 

Be prepared for a story that begins with an open door leading to a world that defies time and space. Pray leave your logic and day-to-day cares on the doorstep and explore the forests of unearthly delights where sentient trees, immortal nature spirits, and talking animals reveal a sinister secret hidden in plain sight.

a fanciful read with serious historical implications

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Published on January 26, 2025 01:43
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