Literary criticism
Label
Literary criticism
Name
Literary criticism
Source
lcgft
Focus
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Incoming Resources
- Eating my words, and 128 other poems, Brian P. Cleary ; illustrations by Andy Rowland and Richard Watson
- On war and writing, Samuel Hynes
- The fine art of literary fist-fighting, how a bunch of rabble-rousers, outsiders, and ne'er-do-wells concocted creative nonfiction, Lee Gutkind
- Wonder confronts certainty, Russian writers on the timeless questions and why their answers matter, Gary Saul Morson
- New essays on The Great Gatsby, edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli
- In the company of radical women writers, Rosemary Hennessy
- A beat beyond, selected prose, by Major Jackson ; edited by Amor Kohli
- James Baldwin's Another country, bookmarked, Kim McLarin
- 101 horror books to read before you're murdered, Sadie "Mother Horror" Hartmann, co-owner of Night Worms and editor-in-chief of Dark Hart ; foreword by Josh Malerman ; illustrations by Marco Fontanili
- Rhyme's rooms, the architecture of poetry, Brad Leithauser
- Freedom narratives of African American women, a study of 19th century writings, Janaka Bowman Lewis
- Suʼāl al-ḥubb, ʻAlī Ḥusayn
- Edith Wharton, a collection of critical essays, Irving Howe, editor
- Shakespeare's sisters, how women wrote the Renaissance, Ramie Targoff
- The Cambridge companion to Richard Wright, edited by Glenda R. Carpio
- Hummingbirds between the pages, Chris Arthur
- How to draw a novel, Martín Solares ; translated from the Spanish by Heather Cleary
- John Okada, the life & rediscovered work of the author of No-no boy, edited by Frank Abe, Greg Robinson, and Floyd Cheung
- Pinocchio, the adventures of a puppet, doubly commented upon and triply illustrated, Giorgio Agamben ; translated by Adam Kotsko
- The poetry of Sappho, an expanded edition featuring newly discovered poems, translated by Jim Powell
- Possessed by memory, the inward light of criticism, Harold Bloom
- The Book of Revelation, a biography, Timothy Beal
- Bluebeard's chamber, guilt and confession in Thomas Mann, Michael Maar ; translated by David Fernbach [with a new afterword]
- PARIS NOTEBOOKS, ESSAYS & REVIEWS, Mavis Gallant ; foreword by Hermione Lee
- Forging freedom in W. E. B. Du Bois's twilight years, no deed but memory, edited by Phillip Luke Sinitiere
- The medieval mind of C. S. Lewis, how great books shaped a great mind, Jason M. Baxter
- The writer as illusionist, uncollected & unpublished work, William Maxwell ; selected and introduced by Alec Wilkinson
- Anne Spencer between worlds, Noelle Morrissette
- Bad Chaucer, the great poet's greatest mistakes in the Canterbury Tales, Tison Pugh
- Clifford Odets, R. Baird Shuman
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, by Cecil B. Williams
- The music of time, poetry in the twentieth century, John Burnside
- The Greek plays, sixteen plays by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, new translations edited by Mary Lefkowitz and James Romm
- Jane Austen's women, an introduction, Kathleen Anderson
- The William H. Gass reader, [William H. Gass]
- The questions that matter most, reading, writing, and the exercise of freedom, Jane Smiley
- Glad to the brink of fear, a portrait of Ralph Waldo Emerson, James Marcus
- Spirit deep, recovering the sacred in Black women's travel, Tisha M. Brooks
- The science of murder, the forensics of Agatha Christie, Carla Valentine
- The Cambridge centenary Ulysses, the 1922 text with essays and notes, James Joyce ; edited by Catherine Flynn
- F. Scott Fitzgerald, by Kenneth Eble
- Zero at the bone, fifty entries against despair, Christian Wiman
- Reading black books, how African American literature can make our faith more whole and just, Claude Atcho
- The naive and the sentimental novelist, Orhan Pamuk ; translated by Nazim Dikbaş
- Great literary friendships, Janet Phillips
- The extinct scene, late modernism and everyday life, Thomas S. Davis
- Night Shift ; plus, Ursula and the author ; plus, Promised lands, and much more / Eileen Gunn
- Bound to violence, Yambo Ouologuem ; translated from the French by Ralph Manheim ; with an introduction and annotations by Chérif Keïta
- Ear training, literary essays, William H. Pritchard
- Shakespeare was a woman and other heresies, how doubting the bard became the biggest taboo in literature, Elizabeth Winkler
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1