In 2007, Stritmatter and writer Lynne Kositsky published an essay in the Review of English Studies proposing that William Strachey’s eyewitness account of the 1609 Sea Venture shipwreck on the island of Bermuda, A True Reportory of the Wracke and Redemption of Sir Thomas Gates, Knight, was misdated and largely plagiarized, and arguing that sources earlier than Strachey's letter account for Shakespeare's imagery and wording.[8] The narrative, dated 1610 but not published until 1625, is generally accepted as a source for Shakespeare’s The Tempest,[9] and a composition date later than the first recorded performance of the play would disqualify it as a possible source for the play.[10]
Selected works
The Marginalia of Edward de Vere's Geneva Bible: Providential Discovery, Literary Reasoning, and Historical Consequence. University of Massachusetts PhD Dissertation, February 2001.
"A Law Case in Verse: Venus and Adonis and the Authorship Question." University of Tennessee Law Review 72:1 (Fall 2004): 171-219.
With Lynne Kositsky, "Shakespeare and the Voyagers Revisited" Review of English Studies 58:236 (September 2007): 447-472.
^"Bible FAQ". Shake-speare’s Bible.com. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
^Anderson, Mark (2005). "Shakespeare" by Another Name: The Life of Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, The Man Who Was Shakespeare. Gotham ISBN978-1-5924-0103-1, pp=381—2.
^Egan, Gabriel, "Shakespeare" in Years Work Eng Studies 2009:88, 345–486; Sec. I, 392–93.
^Vaughan, Virginia, and Alden T., eds. (1999) The Tempest, The Arden Shakespeare, 3rd Series, p. 87.