Incoming Resources
- Analytics of literature,, a manual for the objective study of English prose and poetry,, by L.A. Sherman
- American literature;, the makers and the making, [compiled by] Cleanth Brooks, R.W.B. Lewis [and] Robert Penn Warren
- Afro-American writers, 1940-1955, edited by Trudier Harris
- Archetypes and motifs in folklore and literature, a handbook, Jane Garry and Hasan El-Shamy, editors
- The Oxford companion to women's writing in the United States, editors in chief: Cathy N. Davidson, Linda Wagner-Martin ; editors, Elizabeth Ammons [and others]
- Patriotic gore;, studies in the literature of the American Civil War
- The anatomy of satire
- Scriptures for a generation, what we were reading in the '60s, Philip D. Beidler
- American realists and naturalists, edited by Donald Pizer and Earl N. Harbert
- The Old Left in history and literature, Julia Dietrich
- The Oxford encyclopedia of American literature, edited by Jay Parini
- The shores of light, a literary chronicle of the twenties and thirties, by Edmund Wilson
- American iconology, new approaches to nineteenth-century art and literature, edited by David C. Miller
- Chicano writers, edited by Francisco A. Lomelí and Carl R. Shirley, Third series
- The companion to African literatures, editors, Douglas Killam & Ruth Rowe ; consultant editor, Bernth Lindfors ; associate editors, Gerald M. Moser and Alain Ricard
- How to read and why, Harold Bloom
- Language and silence;, essays on language, literature, and the inhuman
- Literature lost, social agendas and the corruption of the humanities, John M. Ellis
- Castilian writers, 1400-1500, edited by Frank A. Domínguez and George D. Greenia
- The raven and the whale;, the war of words and wits in the era of Poe and Melville
- Afro-American writers before the Harlem renaissance, edited by Trudier Harris ; associate editor, Thadious M. Davis
- Here at the New Yorker, Brendan Gill
- Merriam-Webster's encyclopedia of literature
- Genius, a mosaic of one hundred exemplary creative minds, Harold Bloom
- The best of Mr. Punch;, the humorous writings of Douglas Jerrold., Edited with an introd. by Richard M. Kelly
- The sense of an ending;, studies in the theory of fiction, [by] Frank Kermode
- The Oxford encyclopedia of American literature, Jay Parini, editor-in-chief
- The madwoman in the attic, the woman writer and the nineteenth-century literary imagination, Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar
- The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English, [edited by] Ian Ousby ; Foreword by Doris Lessing
- A history of Afro-American literature, Blyden Jackson
- The Oxford companion to the English language, editor, Tom McArthur ; managing editor, Feri McArthur
- The Harlem renaissance in black and white, George Hutchinson
- Albert Camus par lui-même, Morvan Lebesque
- Ariadne's thread, a guide to international tales found in classical literature, William Hansen
- Exuberance, the passion for life, by Kay Redfield Jamison
- English literature in the early eighteenth century, 1700-1740
- Eighteenth-century critical essays
- Color codes, modern theories of color in philosophy, painting and architecture, literature, music, and psychology, Charles A. Riley II
- Dictionary of Native American literature, Andrew Wiget, editor
- Science fiction, history, science, vision, Robert Scholes, Eric S. Rabkin
- German writers and works of the early Middle Ages, 800-1170, edited by Will Hasty and James Hardin
- Allegory, John MacQueen
- Soviet attitudes toward American writing
- A literary history of Rome in the silver age, from Tiberius to Hadrian, by J. Wight Duff ; edited by A.M. Duff
- The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature, edited by M.C. Howatson
- Encyclopedia of American literature, Steven R. Serafin, general editor ; Alfred Bendixen, associate editor
- German writers of the Renaissance and Reformation, 1280-1580, edited by James Hardin and Max Reinhart
- Was Huck Black?, Mark Twain and African-American voices, Shelley Fisher Fishkin
- American literature in context, [general editor, Arnold Goldman.]
- Madame Bovary, c'est moi!, the great characters of literature and where they came from, André Bernard