Why this exists

When I was studying drama therapy, I wanted a resource like this and couldn't find one. The information was scattered. A few foundational books, paywalled journal articles, the occasional blog post, and a lot of half-broken PDFs traded between cohorts. It was real material, but it was buried, and finding it was its own job.

This site is what I would have wanted then. Free, no ads, no paywalls. Over 1,600 bibliography entries hand-checked, condition guides, technique write-ups, a directory, and a blog. Built and maintained by one person with a deep affection for the field.

That's the whole point. I want students, new practitioners, and curious clients to find what I couldn't.

Where the money goes

Running a site this size isn't free. Tips help cover:

  • Domain and hosting
  • Hours spent verifying research links and updating the bibliography
  • Writing new guides as the field grows
  • Tools and subscriptions (research databases, citation tools, image licensing)
  • Paying guest contributors when their work goes up

Tips are processed through Ko-fi. They're not tax-deductible, this site isn't a registered nonprofit. After processing fees, every dollar goes back into keeping the site running and growing.

Tip the editor

Other ways to support

If a coffee isn't in your budget, these help just as much:

  • Share a page that helped you with someone who'd benefit
  • Use the Amazon or Bookshop.org links when you're already buying drama therapy books (see the affiliate disclosure for how that works)
  • Subscribe to the quarterly digest at the top of any page
  • Tell your supervisor, your peers, or your students that this site exists

Spotted something? Want to suggest a topic?

If you find an error, want to suggest a topic, or have feedback that would make the site better, I want to hear from you. Contact the editor, there's a short form for corrections, suggestions, listings, contributions, and any other note you want to send my way.

Thank you for reading.