
I'm delighted to discover that my article on the maternal genealogy of
Lewis Carroll [1832-1898], author of
Alice in Wonderland, incorporating results of my ongoing research into
Skeffington genealogy
[download PDF file], is referenced in the official website of the prestigious
Lewis Carroll Society:

I hasten to point out [for readers who might be tempted to jump to wrong conclusions] that I am not related personally to either Lewis Carroll or his Skeffington family that ascends to the Plantagenet monarchs. The current state of my personal family-history research suggests that my Skyvington ancestors branched away from the patriarchal Leicestershire Skeffington line at an early date, well before these ramifications involving Skeffington folk in Ireland and subsequent marriage links with British royalty. I'm constantly motivated by the challenge of identifying a primordial Skyvington patriarch—linked to individuals named
Simon de Scheftinton, or
John de Skefynton, or maybe even
Odo de Scevington—relatively close to the epoch of
William the Conqueror. Like Carroll's personages, these legendary ancestors all lie on the other side of the looking glass, and I don't really expect to ever find them one day. But it's fun to search for shadows.