In the 1980s, Brennan campaigned to have depictions of smoking in comics banned, which led then-Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas to issue a proclamation designating January 1990 as "T. Casey Brennan Month."[2]
2: "The Black Mistress: Mystery of the Drowned Dowager" (art by Bill Black) Page 1Page 2Page 3
The Equinox, Volume V, Number 3
"What Rabbits Are Like"
The Daniel Fry connection
One of T. Casey Brennan's early publishers was alleged UFO contactee Daniel Fry, who published his essays in Understanding magazine; examples from October 1974 and September 1988 issues are posted on the Internet.
References
^"TT with HD: T. Casey Brennan [interview]". HomelessDave.com. April 7, 2006. Archived from the original on January 25, 2013. [M]y first name is Terrance. My parents named me that, but decided not to use it. They decided to call me by my middle name, Casey. So all through my school days I was always Casey Brennan. When I began publishing, I decided to appropriate my first initial.
^"Proclamation". United States: State of Arkansas. December 22, 1989. Archived from the original on January 22, 2013.
External links
Repository of T. Casey Brennan's John F. Kennedy-related prose pieces
Miller, Jordan (July 24, 2009). My days as an unemployed person. First installment [T. Casey Brennan interview]. AnnArbor.com. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
Audio interview with T. Casey Brennan
T. Casey Brennan in February 2008 with band Nessie on YouTube
Kitaro's Sideshow, podcast in Hebrew from Israel, featured songs by T. Casey Brennan in episodes #36 and #37.