Is Shakespeare the true author, or is a lesser-known thinker hiding in plain sight? This provocative pamphlet weighs the evidence and questions long-held claims with wit and careful reasoning.
From debates about the plays’ authorship to close readings of key documents, this book examines the case for and against Bacon as the writer behind Shakespeare’s works. It compares historical criticism, manuscript clues, and publication history, offering a clear alternative perspective grounded in textual detail rather than rumor.
- Explains the Baconian hypothesis and how it contrasts with traditional authorship views.
- Discusses the Droeshout portrait, engravings, and other visual evidence tied to the figure of Shakespeare.
- Reviews the role of glosses, translations, and what early printers reveal about attribution.
- Quotes contemporaries and analyzes how reputations shaped the debate across generations.
Ideal for readers curious about literary history, authorship debates, and how scholars use evidence to test big claims.