Ann Casey
Contributing Writer
Writer at Work - Ann Casey
I graduated from New England College with a BA in Theatre and a minor in Literature. Spent a year at Carnegie Mellon University in Theatre Design. By utilizing my skills as a fiction writer and playwright, I have branched into the exciting world of non-fiction.
Latest Articles
|
The Houses of Stuart and Hanover
To understand the events leading to the Jacobite Rebellion, a construction of the lineage of the monarchies involved and the political implications is necessitated.
Jan 7, 2010
- Ann Casey
|
|
Wilfred Owen, Poet Soldier
The War to end all Wars, somehow contrived amidst all its foul butchery, to give rise to a poet.
Dec 26, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
The Free Village of Turnbull
Within the various court and deed records of nineteenth century Virginia, valuable histories of the free African-American villages are found.
Dec 26, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
Writers and Copyrights
There is historic evidence that Cicero insisted that he was to be paid for his work and the centuries of writers who followed, owe the copyright battle to him.
Dec 21, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
The First Mass in Aramaic and Hebrew
The first night of Passover that became the first Mass was spoken in the native dialect of Christ and the Apostles, Armaic and Hebrew.
Dec 18, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
Reformation's Counter Reformation
It was not the tenets of the Catholic Church under attack, it was her corruption of power by the few that caused the greatest ire among her staunch and devote clergy.
Dec 16, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
Advent's Dual Purpose
During advent, Christians mark the great gift of rejoicing for salvation coupled with the inherent grief of the death foretold by human hands.
Dec 9, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
Writing – the Necessary Tools
Open a book, any book and the story tellers will whisper from the pages and speak on how the first of them began, by drawing on the walls.
Dec 4, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
The Great Race of Mercy
Diphtheria, the child strangler, kills quickly and with ferocity, the gray mucus membranes growing back in the throat and in the nasal passages, suffocates its victims.
Nov 16, 2009
- Ann Casey
|
|
Christopher Marlowe's Edward II
Christopher Marlowe with his introduction of blank verse to the Elizabethan stage, changed dramatically the writing style from prose to a challenging height for talent.
Oct 3, 2009
- Ann Casey
|