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The Maybe House by Lynne Kositsky
The Maybe House by Lynne Kositsky









The Maybe House by Lynne Kositsky

Anti-Stratfordians concede that the name “William Shakespeare” appears on the title pages of many of the play quartos they concede that “William Shakespeare” was a sharer in the Lord Chamberlain’s Men finally, they concede that this same “William Shakespeare” was the Stratford businessman immortalized in the monument in Holy Trinity Church. Three of the five points (1, 3, and 4) belabour the obvious. Reedy and Kathman’s table of contents illustrates both the strengths and weaknesses of their essay. Quotations from the Kathman-Reedy essay are highlighted in red. We conclude that the essay’s categories, factual evidence, and logic fail to substantiate its conclusion.

The Maybe House by Lynne Kositsky

The remainder of our essay examines, in line-by-line detail, the contents of the five sections of the Reedy-Kathman essay. Our General Introduction provides a quick survey of the article, noting some strengths and weaknesses of the Reedy-Kathman approach. Our purpose in this response is to outline some points of agreement with these writers and also to indicate in abbreviated form the weaknesses in use of evidence and logic which undermine their orthodox conclusion. David Kathman, “ How We Know That Shakespeare Wrote Shakespeare: The Historical Facts,” the authors explain why they “know” the conclusion stated in their title. Brief Chronicles & Other Past Journals Expand.“Lynne Kositsky.” Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia. “Lynne Kositsky (Author of The Thought of High Windows).” Good Reads. Kositsky lives in the Niagara region of Ontario. Pratt Medal in poetry and an international White Raven Award. Kositsky’s work has been nominated for and awarded several recognitions and awards, including the E. Kotisky continued writing, and went on to publish many more titles, including The Maybe House (2002), The Certificate of Freedom (2003), An Elephant Tree Christmas (2004), The Thought of High Windows (2004), Claire by Moonlight (2005), Minerva’s Voyage (2009), Our Canadian Girl (2010), Rachel (2010), The Plagues of Konar (2014), and With Fearful Bravery (2014). Her first novel was published in 1998, titled Candles she then published Rebecca’s Flame in 1999, A Question of Will was published in 2000, followed by A Mighty Big Imagination in 2001. Kositsky has since published thirteen children’s and young adult fiction books as well as one literary criticism titled On the Date, Sources and Design of Shakespeare’s The Tempest which was published in 2013. Growing up in London, England, Lynne eventually became a teacher and continued to teach on various levels until she left the profession to pursue writing full time. Lynne Kositsky (1947‒) was born in Montreal, Quebec.











The Maybe House by Lynne Kositsky