Literary criticism
Label
Literary criticism
Name
Literary criticism
Source
lcgft
Focus
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of44
- The Sisterhood, how a network of Black women writers changed American culture, Courtney Thorsson
- In search of a beautiful freedom, new and selected essays, Farah Jasmine Griffin
- The bloodied nightgown and other essays, Joan Acocella
- The spice must flow, the story of Dune, from cult novels to visionary sci-fi movies, Ryan Britt
- Around the world in 80 books, David Damrosch
- The Wife of Bath, a biography, Marion Turner
- Eating my words, and 128 other poems, Brian P. Cleary ; illustrations by Andy Rowland and Richard Watson
- The waste land, a biography of a poem, Matthew Hollis
- Buried treasures, the power of political fairy tales, Jack Zipes
- In defense of love, an argument, Ron Rosenbaum
- Black comix returns, John Jennings, Damian Duffy
- The dark fantastic, race and the imagination from Harry Potter to The hunger games, Ebony Elizabeth Thomas
- The sinner and the saint, Dostoevsky and the gentleman murderer who inspired a masterpiece, Kevin Birmingham
- Breaking down Vonnegut, Julia A. Whitehead
- Shakespeare's sisters, how women wrote the Renaissance, Ramie Targoff
- The strangers' house, writing Northern Ireland, Alexander Poots
- This is the canon, decolonize your bookshelf in 50 books, Joan Anim-Addo, Deirdre Osborne, Kadija George Sesay
- These precious days, essays, Ann Patchett
- What is the story of Ebenezer Scrooge?, by Sheila Keenan ; illustrated by Andrew Thomson
- Take arms against a sea of troubles, the power of the reader's mind over a universe of death, Harold Bloom
- The Dharma bum's guide to western literature, finding nirvana in the classics, Dean Sluyter
- A swim in a pond in the rain, in which four Russians give a master class on writing, reading, and life, George Saunders
- How to draw a novel, Martin Solares ; translated from the Spanish by Heather Cleary
- The Darcy myth, how romantic leads got mixed up with scary monsters, and why it matters, Rachel Feder
- Zero at the bone, fifty entries against despair, Christian Wiman
- Gardening can be murder, how poisonous poppies, sinister shovels, and grim gardens have inspired mystery writers, Marta McDowell ; illustrations by Yolanda V. Fundora
- The Darcy myth, Jane Austen, literary heartthrobs, and the monsters they taught us to love, Rachel Feder
- The questions that matter most, reading, writing, and the exercise of freedom, Jane Smiley
- Origins of The wheel of time, the legends and mythologies that inspired Robert Jordan, Michael Livingston ; foreword by Harriet McDougal
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1