Literary criticism
Label
Literary criticism
Name
Literary criticism
Source
lcgft
Focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of37
- Shakespeare's sisters, how women wrote the Renaissance, Ramie Targoff
- Mean girl, Ayn Rand and the culture of greed, Lisa Duggan
- The science of murder, the forensics of Agatha Christie, Carla Valentine
- Words and worlds, from autobiography to zippers, Alison Lurie
- Virginia Woolf, and the women who shaped her world, Gillian Gill
- Lolita in the afterlife, on beauty, risk, and reckoning with the most indelible and shocking novel of the twentieth century, edited by Jenny Minton Quigley
- Poetry unbound, 50 poems to open your world, Pádraig Ó Tuama
- The making of Middle-Earth, the worlds of Tolkien and the Lord of the Rings, Christopher Snyder
- Glad to the brink of fear, a portrait of Ralph Waldo Emerson, James Marcus
- Reading Black books, how African American literature can make our faith more whole and just, Claude Atcho
- Ex Libris, Michiko Kakutani ; illustrated by Dana Tanamachi
- Au revoir, Tristesse, lessons in happiness from French literature, Viv Groskop
- Shakespeare was a woman and other heresies, how doubting the bard became the biggest taboo in literature, Elizabeth Winkler
- The Peanuts papers, writers and cartoonists on Charlie Brown, Snoopy & the gang, and the meaning of life, Andrew Blauner, editor
- Wonderlands, essays on the life of literature, Charles Baxter
- Letters to a writer of color, edited by Deepa Anappara and Taymour Soomro
- The Wife of Bath, a biography, Marion Turner
- Around the world in 80 books, David Damrosch
- The gift of Rumi, experiencing the wisdom of the Sufi master, Emily Jane O'Dell
- Pandora's jar, women in Greek myths, Natalie Haynes
- Mantel pieces, Royal bodies and other writing from the London review of books, Hilary Mantel
- The bright book of life, novels to read and reread, Harold Bloom
- Unmask Alice, LSD, satanic panic, and the imposter behind the world's most notorious diaries, Rick Emerson
- The American canon, literary genius from Emerson to Pynchon, Harold Bloom ; edited by David Mikics
- This is the canon, decolonize your bookshelf in 50 books, Joan Anim-Addo, Deirdre Osborne, Kadija George Sesay
- Stephen King, a complete exploration of his work, life, and influences, Bev Vincent
- Dracula daily, reading Bram Stoker's Dracula in real time with commentary by the internet, Matt Kirkland
- The turning point, 1851--a year that changed Charles Dickens and the world, Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
- Dirty pictures, how an underground network of nerds, feminists, geniuses, bikers, potheads, printers, intellectuals, and art school rebels revolutionized art and invented comix, Brian Doherty
- Black love matters, real talk on romance, being seen, and happy ever afters, edited by Jessica P. Pryde
- Rhyme's rooms, the architecture of poetry, Brad Leithauser
- Shakespearean, on life and language in times of disruption, Robert McCrum
- Maus now, selected writing, edited by Hillary Chute
- Under the red, white and blue, patriotism, disenchantment and the stubborn myth of the Great Gatsby, Greil Marcus
- Cold warriors, writers who waged the literary cold war, Duncan White
- The literature book, James Canton, consultant editor
- The life of crime, detecting the history of mysteries and their creators, Martin Edwards
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1