A - Titles in Literature
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10th to 15th Century
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A-to-Z Writers in Classic Literature
Abbey, Edward
Abe, Kobo
Abelard, Peter
Abenaki Myth - Native American Mythology
About Legends
About Literary History - What Happened?
About Literary Theory and Criticism
Academic Programs in Literature
Academic Programs in Literature
Academic Programs in Literature
Academic Resources
Action & Adventure Literature
Addams, Jane
Addison, Joseph
Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The - Twain
Ady, Endre
Aeneid - Vergil
Aeschylus
Aesop
Afghan Mythology
African American Literature
African American Reading Groups
African American Writers
African Literature
African Myth
African Writers
Agamemnon - Greek Mythology
Age of Innocence, The - Edith Wharton
Agee, James
Agnon, Shmuel Yosef
Aiken, Conrad
Aikin, Anna Laetitia
Ainu Mythology - Japanese Literature
Akenside, Mark
Akhmatova, Anna
Akutagawa, Ryunosuke
Al Aaraaf - Poe
Albanian Literature
Alcman
Alcott, Louisa May
Alden, Isabella
Aldington, Richard
Aldrich, Thomas Bailey
Alfieri, Vittorio
Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
Alighieri, Dante
All About Books - Themes Genres Titles
American Literature - Colonial Period
American Literature - General Resources
American Literature - Modern Period
American Literature - Naturalism
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American Literature
American Theater
American West Literature
American Writers
Amon - Egyptian Mythology
Ancient Greek Literature
Anderson, Hans Christian
Anderson, Sherwood
Andreyev, Leonid
Anglo Saxon Literature
Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy
Anthologies, General Resources
Antony and Cleopatra - Shakespeare
Apache Myth - Native American Mythology
Aphrodite - Greek Mythology
Aquinas, Thomas
Arabic Literature
Aragon, Louis
Arezzo, Guittone d'
Argus (Argos) - Greek Mythology
Aristophanes
Aristotle
Arnold, Matthew
Art for Art's Sake
Artaud, Antonin
Arthurian Literature - Classic Lit.
Articles in Literature
Ashbridge, Elizabeth
Asian Literature
Assyro-Babylonian Myths
Athena
Atlantis Mythology
Attila, Jozsef
Atwood, Margaret
Aubrey, John
Auden, Wystan Hugh
Audiobooks
Aurora Leigh - Elizabeth B. Browning
Austen Collectible
Austen, Jane
Australian Literature
Australian Mythology
Australian Writers
Awakening, The - Kate Chopin
Awards & Bestsellers
Awards
Aztec and Mayan Mythology
Back to School - Literature
Bacon, Francis
Baldwin, James
Balzac, Honre de
Banned Books and Censorship
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Baum, L. Frank
Baum, Vicki
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Becke, George Lewis ("Louis")
Bede
Before You Buy
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Belasco, David
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Beowulf
Bestsellers
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Billy Budd, Sailor - Herman Melville
Bio Shakespeare
Biography
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Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
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Brontë, Charlotte
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Callimachus
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Cavalier poets
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Cervantes, Miguel de
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich
Chesterton, Gilbert Keith
Children's Books
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Chinese Literature
Chinese Mythology
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Christie, Agatha
Christmas Carol, A - Charles Dickens
Christmas Literature
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Churchill, Winston
Civil War Literature
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Classic Literature Directory
Classical and Myth Theory and Criticism
Classics Information
Clean Well-Lighted Place, A - Hemingway
Cleland, John
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Coleridge, Samuel
Colette
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Coriolanus - William Shakespeare
Country Wife, The - William Wycherly
Courtly Love
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Daniel, Samuel
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Days in Literature
Death Be Not Proud
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Declaration of Independence
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Dickinson, Emily
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Don Juan - Lord Byron
Donne, John
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Eliot, T.S. (Thomas Stearns)
Ellison, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Emma - Jane Austen
Enlightenment
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Fairy Tales
Family Saga in Literature
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Find titles in literature, including "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," "Adventures of Tom Sawyer," "Adam Bede," "Anna Karenina," "Awakening," and other literary works.
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This page provides information and details related to Classic Literature from the 10th to the 15th century. The information includes details about Christian mystery plays and much more.
Look at some of the great general resource regarding the Renaissance, the Reformation, and Elizabethan literature.
This page provides information and details related to Classic Literature. Specifically, you'll find facts about 17th-century literary criticism, which covers the works of Aphra Behn, George Herbert, and John Bunyan--to name a few.
The Puritan Revolt put pressure on traditional literary forms in the early 17th century, but Milton's "Paradise Lost" met the challenge.
The 18th century was a time of Restoration, with writers like Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Cleland, Thomas Chatterton, and others. Read about literary theory, as it relates to 18th-century literature.
Writers and poets in this period echoed the Enlightenment's emphasis on rational philosophies, science, and secular thought.
These reference pages provide links to authors, texts, teaching resources, critical appraisals, and journals.
The century began with Romanticism in full flower and was marked by the energetic industry of the Victorians.
Read the latest on literary criticism and study.
The Early 20th Century saw a flowering of Modernism, with wars, rumors of wars, and other literary progress. Writers from this period include: Auden, Conrad, Eliot, Frost, Graves, Joyce, Lawrence, Lewis, Lowell, Orwell, Pound, Waugh, Woolf, and Yeats.
Find information and resources for writers from around the world. The names are listed by last name, ranging from A (Peter Abelard, Jane Addams, Joseph Addison, etc.) to Z.
Criticism and descriptions of every book written by the author of "Black Sun." With quotes, a mailing list and a newsletter.
(1924-1993) Japanese writer. Kobo Abe has been compared to German writer Franz Kafka. He's known for Woman in the Dunes and Secret Rendezvous.
(1079-1142) French writer. Peter Abelard (also spelled Abeillard, Abailard, etc., while the best manuscripts have Abaelardus) was born in Pallet, about ten miles east of Nantes in Brittany. He became a philosopher, theologian, and scholar, known for Historia Calamitatum ("Story of My Calamaties") and other works.
The Abenaki tribe is located in the American Northeast. Read the tales.
A "Legend" is a story, handed down. Often the legend is romanticized, growing in scope until the figure appears larger than life in the retelling. Read more about the tales and legends.
Explore the history of literature, from around the world and through the ages. Discover details about periods and movements, and find timeline and chronologies.
Literary theory/criticism is generally understood to be set of principles that can be used to classify or analyze literary works. Explore these sites and resources to learn more about how to understand literary theory and criticism. Also, find out how to use literary theory to write about literature.
Gather information about degree programs that are being offered. Also find a listing of classes, course descriptions, contact information, and more.
Gather information about degree programs that are being offered. Also find a listing of classes, course descriptions, contact information, and more.
Gather information about degree programs that are being offered. Also find a listing of classes, course descriptions, contact information, and more.
Find pages that contain indexes of articles, dissertations, books and reviews about English studies and related topics.
Does the main character scale large mountains, go on amazing adventures on land or at sea, overcome amazing obstacles, travel to never-before-seen places? It's action... it's adventure... and these authors offer unforgettable, pulse-bounding fiction and non-fiction literature.
(1860-1935) American writer. Jane Addams was active in the peace movement; she wrote extensively about social justice and other social service issues. She was an important figure of that period.
(1672-1719) British writer. Poet, essayist and playwright, Joseph Addison once said, "Books are the legacies that a great genius leaves to mankind, which are delivered down from generation to generation as presents to the posterity of those who are yet unborn."
"The Adventure of Tom Sawyer," by Mark Twain, appeared in England in June 1876, and six months later in the United States. Tom Sawyer's tale is set around 1845.
(1877-1919) Hungarian writer. Endre Ady is best-known for his love poems. In 1903, he published his first significant volume of poetry, "Még egyszer." He wrote some 1,000 poems and published 10 volumes of poetry in 12 years.
"Aeneid," by Roman poet Vergil (70 B.C.–19 B.C.) is a Latin epic about the mythic founder of Rome.
(525?-456 BC) Greek writer. He was the first of three great Greek writers of tragedy, which included Sophocles and Euripides. He wrote perhaps 90 plays (7 survive in full) and won 13 first prizes at the Greater Dionysia.
Supposedly a freed slave from Thrace, his name became attached to a collection of beast fables long transmitted through oral tradition.
Peruse a list of 100 proverbs. The proverbs are offered in transliteration and English translation.
The diverse and distinguished body of writing that is African American literature presents some of the best examples of the American investigation of the question of identity.
These sites provide information and resources for readers of African American literature.
Read more about the African American writers, including: Baldwin, Cullen, Douglass, Du Boise, Hurston, Toomer, Washington, and Wheatley.
Find biographies on many African writers, works, facts, and some history -- all available at these sites.
These resources detail a variety of myths from several sources. Find variants for Ethiopia, the Ekoi, the Yoruba, and the Zulus.
Read more about African writers: Coetzee, Achebe, Lessing, Mahfouz, etc.
Greek Mythology. He was the son of Atreus and brother of Menelaus. King of Mycenae, he led the Greek troops against Troy. Several tragedies bear the name of "Agamemnon." Aeschylus wrote one, which was followed by Seneca's play (based on the work of Aeschylus and others, but dramatically different in structure, etc.).
"The Age of Innocence," by American writer Edith Wharton (1862-1937), was published in 1920. "The House of Mirth" was published in 1905.
(1909-1955) American writer. James Agee's work includes "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" (1941) and "Death in the Family" (which won a Pulitzer).
(1888-1970) Isreali writer. Originally surnamed Czaczkes, he was born in Galicia. Shmuel Agnon was one of the greatest Hebrew novelist and short-story writers. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1966 with Nelly Sachs.
(1889-1973) American writer. Conrad Aiken wrote numerous novels and short stories, many of them based on psychoanalytic theory. He also wrote poetry and criticism. He was editor for Emily Dickinson's Selected Poems (1924).
(1743-1825) British writer. Anna Laetitia Aikin, also known by her married name, Barbauld, wrote poetry about the early years of Britain's era of world power.
"Ainu" means "human." Many of the tales and legends were passed down from generation to generation in the oral tradition. Read more about the literature of the Ainu people.
(1721-1770) British writer. Mark Akenside was a poet and physician, known for "The Pleasures of Imagination" (1744), "Odes on Various Subjects" (1745) and the "Epistle to Curio" (1744).
(1889-1966) Russian writer. One of the greatest women poets in Russian literature, Anna Akhmatova began writing at the age of 11. She writes mainly about frustrated and tragic love.
(1892-1927) Japanese writer. He was one of Japan's finest short story writers. Ryunosuke Akutagawa is known for "Rashomon" (1915) and "In the Grove" (1921).
"Al Aaraaf," by Edgar Allan Poe, was published in 1829: "O! nothing earthly save the ray / (Thrown back from flowers) of Beauty's eye, / As in those gardens where the day..."
Read more about Albanian literature.
(7th century BC) Greek writer. Alcman was one of the earliest Greek lyric poets.
(1832-1888) American Writer. Born in Germantown, Pennsylvania, Louisa May Alcott is famous for the novel, "Little Women." Her father, Amos Bronson Alcott was an important (and controversial) man of the time.
(1841-1930) American writer. At the peak of Isabella Alden's career, around 1900, her books were selling at the rate of 100 copies a year.
(1892-1962) British writer. Richard Aldington is known as one of the first Imagist poets. He was also a novelist and literary scholar.
(1837-1907) American writer. Thomas Aldrich was an American writer and editor, whose most famous work, "Story of a Bad Boy" (1870), was based on his boyhood experiences in Portsmouth.
(1749-1803) Italian writer. Vittorio Alfieri was an Italian dramatist and poet, who was one of the leading literary and patriotic figures of modern Italian history.
"Alice in Wonderland," by Lewis Carrol, was first published in 1865 to immediate success. Often considered a children's book, the book has been adapted to movies, and many other formats.
(1265-1321) Italian writer. Born in Florence, Dante is famous for "The Divine Comedy" and other works. He was active in the politics of his time. He lived in exile for the last years of his life.
Books are what it's all about... Read what writers have said about books. Find lists of titles, genres, bestsellers, book reviews, and other resources related to books and literature.
Internet resources on the Colonial Period of American Literature.
Find information and resources related to American Literature, old and new. Browse information from Colonial times down through Modern American Literature. There's lots to read and learn...
Find infromation and resources related to Modern American Literature, from 1914 to 1945. Modern writers include: Agee, Anderson, Buck, Burroughs, Cather, Crane, Bishop, Dos Passos, Faulkner, Ferber, Cummings, Chandler, etc.
Naturalism refers to literature that applies "natural" or objective priciples to writing. American writer include: Frank Norris, Theodore Dreiser, Jack London, Stephen Crane, Edith Wharton, Ellen Glasgow, and John Steinbeck.
A literaray epoch spanning the years 1865-1900. Writers from that period include: Henry Adams, Horatio Alger, Frank Baum, Edward Bellamy, Kate Chopin, and others.
Find essential information about the Romantic period in American Literature, which included writers like Washington Irving, Emerson, Thoreau, Emily Dickinson, Edgar Allan Poe, Nathanial Hawthorne, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, and others.
From the rich established culture of legends, folktales and other literature through the histories, religious writings and travel narratives to the wonderful literature of modern America, the people have created a literature of experience.
American theater is filled with writers like Robert Hunter, Eugene O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, Thomas Godfrey, and Arthur Miller. Read more about American plays.
Accesses Western manuscript collections, newspapers, articles, and writer's profiles.
Find info. about American writers: Ambrose Bierce, Kate Chopin, James Fenimore Cooper, Stephen Crane, Emily Dickinson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and more.
Egyptian Mythology. An ancient Egyptian deity. Represented as a ram.
Of the hundreds of works produced by Greek playwrights, only 32 plays remain.
(1805-1875) Danish writer. Hans Christian Anderson combined folk legends with his own imagination to produced fairy tales that are still appreciated today. He was trained as singer and actor before achieving success as a playwright and novelist.
(1876-1941) American writer. Anderson's talent was not widely recognized until the publication of his short story collection "Winesburg, Ohio" (1919), which deals with the struggle of ordinary people to assert their individuality.
(1871-1919) Russian writer. Leonid Andreyev was a prolific writer, producing short stories, sketches, and dramas. His works include "The Red Raugh" (1905), and "The Seven Who Were Hanged" (1909).
This period in literature (from c.650 to c.1100) is often referred to as Old English. Works of literature that fall into this period include: "Widsith," "Beowulf," and "Cćdmon."
"Anna Karenina" is one of Leo Tolstoy's most famous works. The book begins with: "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
Links to comprehensive literary resources such as anthologies, collections, and reference works.
Antony and Cleopatra is about the ill-fated love affair between heroic Mark Antony and Cleopatra. Find information and resources.
Read some of the tales from the Apache Nation - Native American Mythology...
Venus (Roman). Greek Mythology Character. The goddess of love. One of the 12 Olympians. Brought forth from ocean foam near Cyprus or Cythera (according to some myths). Also, some myths say, she was daughter of Zeus and Dione. Goddess of beauty. Mother of love. Queen of laughter. Mistress of all graces and pleasures.
(1225-1274) Italian writer. Although St. Thomas lived less than fifty years, he composed more than sixty works. St. Thomas's works may be classified as philosophical, theological, scriptural, and apologetic, or controversial.
Find a very interesting collection of online articles, stories, and poems from Arabic Literature, including an online version of "Arabian Nights."
(1897-1982) French writer. Louis Aragon was a poet, novelist, and essayist. He was a founder of Surrealism.
(1235-1294) Italian writer. Guittone d'Arezzo was the founder of the Tuscan school of courtly poetry. He was the creator of dolce stil nuovo ("sweet new style").
1 Greek Mythology character. Son of Zeus and Niobe. Zeus' first child by a mortal. 2 Name of a town in Argolis, Greece. 3 Odysseus' dog. 4 100-eyed giant who guarded Io. 5 Son of Jason and Medea.
(448?-385 BC) Greek writer. Aristophanes is considered one fo the greatest writers of comedy.
(384-322 B.C.E.) Greek writer. Aristotle was a philosopher and writer, with more than 150 treatises.
(1822-1888) British writer. Matthew Arnold was a poet and critic, who wrote the famous poem "Dover Beach."
Art for Art's Sake - Literary Theory and Criticism.
(1896-1948) French writer. Antonin Artaud was a French poet, dramatist, and actor, whose theories and work influenced the development of experimental theater.
These sites are devoted to all aspects of the Arthurian era. You'll find bibliographies, timelines, lesson plans, and much more.
Read more about literature and writers from around the world, including information about Mark Twain, Jane Austen, Edith Wharton, and more. Also find details about important literary periods.
(1713-1755) Irish/American writer. Elizabeth Ashbridge was an indentured servant who immigrated from Ireland to America in 1732. She later returned to Ireland.
Large indexes of classic Chinese, Japanese, Indian, and other South Asian literature.
Read about the mythology Babylon, Sumeria, and the rest of the region. Find information about Gilgamesh, and other famous characters.
Greek Mythology. Athena was the daughter of Zeus, coming from his head clothed in armor. According to Hesiod, Athena's mother was Metis, but Zeus tricked Metis and assimilated or incorporated Athena into himself before her birth.
This page provides information and details related to Classic Literature. Specifically, you'll find articles, bibliographies, related links and more -- all related to the myth of Atlantis.
(1905-1937) Hungarian writer. Jozsef Attila is considered to be one of the greatest Hungarian writers of the 20th century. He's known for works including: SZÉPSÉG KOLDUSA (1922), NEM ÉN KIÁLTOK (1925), and NINCSEN APÁM SE ANYÁM (1929).
(1939- ) Canadian writer. Notable novels include: The Edible Woman (1972), Surfacing (1972), Lady Oracle (1976) Life Before Man (1979), Bodily Harm (1981), The Handmaid's Tale (1985, received the Governor General's Award), Cat's Eye (1988), The Robber Bride (1993). Her works also include short fiction, poetry, criticism, and children's books.
(1626-1697) British writer. John Aubrey is known for "Lives of Eminent Men." He also wrote the "Natural History of Wiltshire" (ed. by John Britton, 1847) and "Perambulation of Surrey," which was included in the "Natural History and Antiquities of Surrey" (1719).
(1907-1973) British writer. W. H. Auden is an important literary figure in the 20th century. He's known for works: "Spain" (1937), "New Year Letter" (1941), "For the Time Being, a Christmas Oratorio" (1945), "The Age of Anxiety" (1947; Pulitzer Prize)," "Nones (1951), "The Shield of Achilles" (1955), etc.
Listen to the greatest works of literature in audio format. This page offers reviews, links to audiobook publishers, information about audiobooks, and much more!
"Aurora Leigh" (1856), by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, is an epic about the development of a woman poet. Browning writes, "By the way, / The works of women are symbolical. / We sew, sew, prick our fingers, dull our sight...And sleep, and dream of something we are not, / But would be for your sake."
Are you looking for books, pens, and other collectibles related to Jane Austen and her time in Bath, England? Find what you're looking for...
(1775-1817) British writer. Jane Austen wrote about the British rural middle class and introduced new literary topics, such as marriage and classes. This page provides information and resources related to Jane Austen and British Literature.
Gateway to resources about Australian and NZ writers, includes bookshops, libraries, journals, magazines and discussion groups.
Learn about the storytelling culture of Indigenous Australians. Find an aboriginal legend about the first people to walk the earth, and the story of how Yowee, the Spirit of Death killed the first man.
Read more about Australian writers, including: George Becke, Andrew Barton (Banjo) Paterson, Marcus Clarke, Henry Lawson, W. C. Wentworth, Charles Harpur, Adam Lindsay Gordon, Miles Franklin, Hugh McCrae, and more.
"The Awakening," by Kate Chopin, was published in 1899, amid a storm of controversy. She never published another novel.
Writers of world-reknown are often awarded with literary prizes, but that's not always the case... Here's information about the great prizes in literature, along with information about bestsellers.
Find information and resources related to Award-winning literature.
Provides access to the essence of these cultures through archaeology, pictograms, and renderings of legends.
If you're looking for resources that will help in your back-to-school readiness, this is the place. Find reference resources, study guides, lesson plans. It's for students and teachers. Read more...
(1561-1626) British writer. One of the pioneers of modern scientific thought, Bacon's writings fall into three categories: philosophical, purely literary, and professional.
(1924-1987) American writer. James Baldwin is known for "Go Tell it on the Mountain" and "The Fire Next Time."
(1799-1850) French writer. Along with many short stories, plays, and essays, Balzac wrote La comédie humaine (1842-1848); translated as The Human Comedy, 1895-1900), a cycle of about 90 novels describing French society in detail.
Great works of literature have been banned: "Ulysses," "Candide," "Fanny Hill," "Moll Flanders," "Canterbury Tales," "The Arabian Nights," "Leaves of Grass," "Civil Disobedience," "Frankenstein," "Call of the Wild," religious works like The Bible and The Quaran, and so many others.
Great works of literature have been banned: "Ulysses," "Candide," "Fanny Hill," "Moll Flanders," "Canterbury Tales," "The Arabian Nights," "Leaves of Grass," "Civil Disobedience," "Frankenstein," "Call of the Wild," religious works like The Bible and The Quaran, and so many others.
(1821-1867) French writer. One of the great poets of French literature and leader of the symbolist school, Charles Baudelaire possessed a classical sense of form and the ability to find the perfect word.
(1856-1919) American writer. Lyman Frank Baum's best-known work was "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" (1900).
(1888-1960) Austrian writer. Vicki Baum was born in Vienna into a Jewish family. She's known for "Menschen im Hotel" ("People in a Hotel," 1929).
(1732-99) French writer. Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais was a French playwright, well-known for his two comedies: "Le barbier de Seville" (1775) and "Le mariage de Figaro" (1784).
(1855-1913) Australian writer. George Becke's work includes: "By Reef and Palm" (1894), "The Ebbing of the Tide: South Sea Stories" (1895), "A First Fleet Family" (1896), "His Native Wife," (1896) and more. In total Becke published 35 books.
Find a bio of this 7th-century scholar monk, and a link to a site that provides the complete text of the "Ecclesiastical History of the English People."
Before you buy that book, read these pages...
(1640?-1689) British writer. After John Dryden, she was the most prolific dramatist of the Restoration, with works like "The Rover." In "The Lucky Chance," Aphra Behn writes: "... faith, Sir, we are here to Day, and gone to Morrow."
(1859-1931) American writer. David Belasco was a playwright, theatrical producer and manager. Well-known works include: "The Girl I Left Behind Me" (1893), "Heart of Maryland" (1895), "Zaza" (1899), and "Madame Butterfly" (1900).
Read about some of the great personalities in Bangla literature: Rabindranath Tagore, Kazi Nazrul Islam, Begum Sufia Kamal, and Shamsur Rahman.
The most imposing piece of literature that has been handed down to us from the Anglo-Saxons is the folk-epic Beowulf, dated at about 1000.
This page provides information and details related to Bestselling Classic Literature, including directories of book reviews links to bestsellers, electronic publications, and library references. Look up book awards.
(1842-1914) American writer. Explore resource links, hypertext files, and a biography of this mystery-shrouded author of "The Devil's Dictionary."
American writer. Written between 1885 and 1891, this work was never fully completed. The manuscript was discovered in the 1920s. Herman Melville is well-known for "Moby Dick."
Find more information about Shakespeare, his life and his works.
A biography attempts to portray a version of the self, personality, or character.
(1832-1910) Norweigian writer. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1903 "as a tribute to his noble, magnificent and versatile poetry, which has always been distinguished by both the freshness of its inspiration and the rare purity of its spirit."
Blackbeard has been one of the most interesting characters in history. The stories of this pirate are based on Edward Blackbeard Teach.
(1869-1951) British writer. Algernon Henry Blackwood was born in Shooter's Hill, Kent. He wrote many short stories, along with articles, reviews, children's books, and fantasy books.
(1757-1827) British writer. William Blake achieved little fame in his own lifetime, but in the 20th century has come to be recognized as a poetic genius.
(1907- ) French writer. Maurice Blanchot is a novelist and critic, known for works like: "Death Sentence," "The Gaze of Orpheus," "Madness of the Day," "The Step Not Beyond," and others.
Get an overview of this writing group, a list of its authors, links to profiles of each, and a list of modernist authors influenced by the group.
James Joyce fans from around the world celebrate his legacy on Bloomsday--June 16th. The day is celebrated in at least 60 coutries, though the place to be is Dublin, Ireland. One of the many traditions on this day is to read Ulysses. You can participate in one of the look-a-like or literary contests; or you can drink Guinness.
(1313-1375) Italian writer. Giovanni Boccaccio is most famous for "The Decameron" (1353), which was first translated into English in 1620.
Discover more information and resources regarding out-of-print books, first edition, antiquarian books, scholarly books, manuscripts, and more.
Find information and details about events related to literature.
These pages offer bibliographies and book lists for all ages and literary interests. Also find anthologies and reference materials.
Read reviews for books, tapes, CDs, and much more.
(1740-1795) Scottish writer. James Boswell was a close friend of Samuel Johnson, known for An Account of Corsica (1768), Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides (1785) and Life of Samuel Johnson (1791).
(1590-1657) American writer. William Bradford was elected governor of Plymouth in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. He wrote "Of Plymouth Plantation" in 1651.
(1612-1672) American writer. Anne Bradstreet landed in America with John Winthrop at Massachusetts, and she contributed some of America's greatest early works of literature.
(c. 1457-1521) German writer. Sebastian Brant was a German humanist and poet. Brant is perhaps most famous for "Narrenschiff" ("The Ship of Fools"). The poem was translated into Latin and French in 1497, and finally into English in 1570.
"Brave New World" was written by Aldous Huxley in 1932. Even though the book is now considered a Utopian classic, critics found only a week plot and characterization when the work was first published. One reviewer even said, "Nothing can bring it alive."
Read about the largest water lily in the world, and how through the theme of death and rebirth it came to be created by the moon.
(1891-1956) German writer. Bertolt Brecht was influenced by a wide variety of sources including Chinese, Japanese, and Indian theatre, the Elizabethans, Greek tragedy, and more. Some of his works include: "Mother Courage and Her Children," "Galileo," "The Good Person of Szechwan," and "The Caucasian Chalk Circle."
(1896-1966) French writer. André Breton was a French poet and critic. He was also a leader of the surrealistic movement. His works include: "Lettres de guerre" (1919), "Manieste du Surréalisme," (1924), and "La Révolution surréaliste" (1924-30).
Find general resources related to British Literature.
This page features links to authors, works, projects, criticisms, mailing lists, and other resources related to the Medieval period of British literature.
Find texts, essays, biographies, and links to all of the greatest literary minds of this period.
The Restoration in English Literature is usually associated with the comedies of Congreve, Wycherley, and Etheredge.
Some scholars point to the publication of "Lyrical Ballads," in 1798, as the start of the Romantic period, while others say the period started earlier (around 1785) with Blake's "Songs of Innocence" and other works by Charles Lamb, Jane Austen, and Sir Walter Scott.
Find scholarly material for 19th-Century literature and culture, including authors, texts, conferences, and criticism.
Find definitions, information about authors, eras, and genre, along with quotations, complete works, and more. Read about Shakespeare, Chaucer, the Bronte sisters, and much more in the world of British literature: theatre, drama, poetry, and fiction.
The history of British Theatre is filled with writers: Shakespeare, Aphra Behn, John Dryden, Ben Jonson, Thomas Kyd, John Lyly, Christopher Marlowe, and many more. Read about the plays and the playwrights.
Find info about British Writers: Matthew Arnold, Aphra Behn, William Blake, Charles Dickens, William Congreve, and more.
(1820-1849) British writer. Anne Brontë was one of the famous Brontë sisters. She is best known for her novel "Agnes Grey."
(1816-1855) British writer. Charlotte Brontë wrote "Jane Eyre." She once wrote: "We were wholly dependent upon ourselves and each other, on books and study, for the enjoyment and occupations of life."
(1818-1848) British writer. Emily Brontë was one of the famous Brontë sisters. She is perhaps best known for her novel "Wuthering Heights."
(1887-1915) British writer. Rupert Brookes was charming, athletic and handsome. He wrote "Poems" (1911), and "1914 and Other Poems" (1915).
(1605-1682) British writer. Sir Thomas Browne was an English physician and essayist. His works include: "Religio Medici" (1635), "Pseudodoxia Epidemica" (1646), "Hydriotaphia: Urn-Burial" and "The Garden of Cyrus" (1658).
(1806-1861) British writer. E.B. Browning is one of the earliest female writers on the social responsibilities of the woman writer. Her verse novel, "Aurora Leigh" (1857), has been resurrected as a central document of Victorian feminism.
(1812-1889) British writer. Robert Browning is one of the famous poets of the 19th century (Victorian period). He's particularly well-known for his early monologue, "My Last Duchess."
If you love to read, and you want to start your own personal library, these resources and pages offer tips for where to search, what to search for, with book suggestions, and more.
Find information and resources related to Bulgarian Literature.
(1628-1688) British writer. John Bunyan was a Puritan minister and writer. He's known for "The Pilgrim's Progress," an allegory. He also wrote an autobiography: "Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners" (1666).
(1729-1797) Irish writer. One of the best-known aesthetic treatises of the century is "A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful" (1757) by Edmund Burke.
(1752-1840) British writer. Fanny Burney became Madam D'Arblay when she married a refugee-nobleman from France. Her Diaries and other works give us a vivid picture of the inner life at Court.
(1759-1796) Scottish writer. Robert Burns is considered one of (if not the) greatest Scottish writer. His first volume of poetry was published in 1786.
(1835-1902) British writer. Samuel Butler wrote "The Way of All Flesh" (1874), "Life and Habit" (1878), "Evolution, Old and New" (1879), and more.
(1788-1824) British writer. George Gordon Noel Byron, 6th Baron Byron was one of the English "Romantics." His works include: "Don Juan," "Manfred," "Marino Faliero," "Sardanapalus," "The Two Foscari," and "Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage."
California has been the place for dreams and legends... Writers like Mark Twain and Jack London have written about, and been influenced by this amazing state.
"The Call of the Wild" was written by Jack London. It was published in 1903, and is one of London's most well-known works.
(c. 265 BC) Greek writer. Callimachus wrote more than 800 hymns, epigrams, and poems, along with a collection of legends.
Born in Cuba, of Italian parents, Calvino moved to Italy in his youth. After World War II activity as a partisan in the Italian Resistance, he settled in Turin, where he earned his degree in literature.
(1567-1620) British writer. Thomas Campion was a poet, physician, and composer. His first collection was published in 1595: "Thomae Campiani Poemata." Other works include: "Epigrammatum Libri II" (1619), and "Observations in the Art of English Posie" (1602).
Albert Camus was a Nobel laureate, existentialist, and author of "The Plague" and "The Stranger."
(1524?-1580?) Portuguese writer. Luis Vaz de Camőes is considered the greatest Portuguese poet of all time. The first editions of "Os Lusiadas" were printed in 1572.
Find resource and guides for Canadian literature lovers. Also find events, book reviews, bookstores, trivia, publisher, and author information.
Read the classic literature from Canadian publishers.
Find information and resources for Canadian Writers like Lucy Maude Montgomery, Bliss William Carman, Margaret Atwood, and others.
"The Canterbury Tales," by Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1340-1400) is sometimes considered the first collection of short stories in English. The entire collection was probably written between the years 1387 and 1400. It appears that he intended to write 124 stories, while only 24 were actually written.
Captivity Narratives presented quite sensational stories. The narrative detailed the capture and "deliverance" of Puritans. Mary Rowlandson's "The Sovereignty and Goodness of God," is one of the most famous captivity narratives.
(1835-1907) Italian writer. Professor of literature at the Univ. of Bologna from 1860 to 1904, Carducci was a scholar, editor, orator, critic, and patriot. He was awarded the 1906 Nobel Prize in literature.
Find information and resources related to Caribbean Literature.
(1861-1929) Canadian writer. Once one of Canada's best-known poets, he was influential as an editor and writer for "Independent," the "Cosmopolitan," the "Atlantic Monthly," the "Chap Book" and other literary journals. In 1928, he was awarded the Lorne Pierce Gold Medal by the Royal Society of Canada.
(1832-1898) British writer. Pseudonym for Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. Lewis Carroll's work represents some of the most lasting mid-Victorian fantasies.
(1873-1947) American writer. Willa Cather once wrote: "That is happiness: to be dissolved into something complete and great." She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1923 for "One of Ours," and is famous for "My Antonia."
(c. 84-c. 54 BC) Roman writer. Gaius Valerius Catullus is considered the greatest writer of Latin lyric verse.
The Cavalier poets were writers, who were loyal to Charles I (1625–49). These poets included: George Wither, Thomas Carew, Sir John Suckling, Richard Lovelace, Edmund Waller, and Robert Herrick.
(1623-1673) British writer. Margaret Cavendish was the Duchess of Newcastle. She wrote 14 works on a wide variety of topics. Her works include an autobiography, letters, poetry, plays, and more.
Celebrate literature with every holiday, literary anniversary, and birthdays. Remember where and when books were written, published, etc.
These pages compile links to dozens of resources presenting history, languages, music, and specific legends.
Look at some of the great general resource provided for each century.
Greek Mythology. Monster. This creature guarded the underworld.
(1547-1616) Spanish writer. Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra is most famous for "Don Quixote" (Part 1, 1605; Part 2, 1615), often considered the first European novel. He was a contemporary of William Shakespeare.
(c. 1340-1400) British writer. Geoffrey Chaucer is considered the greatest poet of the Middle English period. He's well-known for "The Canterbury Tales."
(1860-1904) Russian writer. Anton Chekhov is renowned for his short fiction and plays, particularly "The Cherry Orchard," "The Three Sisters," and other works.
(1874-1936) British writer. C. K. Chesterton wrote studies of Browning (1903) and Dickens (1906), along with a noted series of crime stories featuring Father Brown as detective. He also wrote many poems and essays.
Children's Books are a great starting point in Classic Literature. And, the books are entertaining for people of all ages and educational backgrounds... They're great fun!
Greek Mythology. Monster.
Large index of classic Chinese literature and ancient philosophy. Features Confucius, Mencius, Lao Tsu, Chuang Tsu, and Sun Tsu.
Chinese mythology dates back to the Wei and Jin Dynasties. Since then, the tales have been filled with dragons, gods, disasters, tricksters, struggle, and much more.
(1851-1904) American writer. Kate Chopin is famous as the author of "The Awakening," a novel about a young woman's dramatic awakening. The book was controversial, and her stories were largely ignored for the next 70 years.
(1890-1976) British writer. Agatha Christie was a popular mystery writer, whose books sold more than one billion copies in more than 45 languages. Her first book, "The Mysterious Affair at Styles," was published in 1920. Her famous characters were Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple.
Published on December 17, 1843, "A Christmas Carol" has been adapted to film more than 200 times. Called "a whimsical sort of masque," the book is more popular than any other work by Charles Dickens.
Writers and storytellers have celebrated Christmas, with traditions from around the world. Read the tale of Scrooge in "A Christmas Carol," by Charles Dickens. Also, read about the mythology of Santa Claus.
Discover the dates and times of the great writers, including Mark Twain, Emily Dickinson, Jane Austen, and more. It's all right here!
(1874-1965) British writer. The speeches and other writings by Winston Churchill are legendary. As Prime Minister during World War II, he spoke this famous line: "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears, and sweat."
The Civil War made a tremendous impact. Numerous authors have written about the events and background both from a literary and historical perspective. One of the most famous works of literature related to the Civil War is "The Red Badge of Courage," by Stephen Crane, but there are many more.
(1834–1841) American writer. Willis Gaylord Clark wrote poetry and prose, including "Song of May," "Memory," and "A Lament." With his twin brother Lewis, he edited "Knickerbocker Magazine."
Find resources and information related to Classic Literature... The page includes information about writers, book reviews, e-texts, holidays and celebrations, and more.
Resource site includes journals, texts, teaching tools, art, architecture and professional organizations.
Find information about journals, texts, teaching tools, art, architecture and professional organizations.
"A Clean Well-Lighted Place" is one of Ernest Hemingway's most famous short works.
(1709-1789) British writer. John Cleland is known for his novel "Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, Or Fanny Hill" (1748-49).
(1940- ) South African writer. Known for his novels "Waiting for the Barbarians" (1980) and "The Life and Times of Michael K" (1983), which won the Booker Prize. He won a second Booker Prize in 1999 for "Disgrace," a novel about life in post-apartheid South Africa.
(1772-1834) British writer. Meet one of the greatest poets of all time. Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote some of the most influential poems such as "Christabel," "Kubla Khan," and "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner."
(1873-1954) French writer. Sidonie-Gabrielle. Born in the village of Saint-Saveur-en Puisaye, Burgundy, Colette One of the most important novelists of the 20th century. Colette is known for: "The Pure and the Impure" (1932), "The Vagabond" (1910), "Cheri" (1920), "My Mother's House" (1922), and "Sido" (1929).
(1824-1889) British writer. Wilkie Collins is famous for "The Moonstone" (1868). He also wrote "The Woman in White" (1860), "No Name" (1862), "Armadale" (1866), "The New Magdalen" (1873), and "Blind Will" (1890).
(1670-1729) British writer. William Congreve was man of comedy, known for his finely crafted dialogue and satiric comment on the behavior of the upper classes. William Congreve influenced generations of later writers.
Mark Twain lived and worked in Connecticut, and one of his most famous works was "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court." Other famous writers who lived in Connecticut were: Jonathan Edwards, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman to name a few...
Contemporary reviews, recent criticism, and a thorough bibliography of criticism about Mark Twain's novel, "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court."
(1857-1924) Polish writer. Jósef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski (Joseph Conrad) is known for "Heart of Darkness," "Lord Jim," and other novels and short stories.
(1789-1851) American writer. American novelist, travel writer, and social critic, regarded as the first great American writer of fiction. He was famed for his action-packed plots and his vivid, if somewhat idealized, portrayal of American life in the forest and at sea.
William Shakespeare wrote "Coriolanus" in 1607 or 1608. "Coriolanus" is a play about Roman conspiracy and the downfall of a great man.
(1675) "The Country Wife" was written by William Wycherly in 1675. Meet Horner, Quack, Mr. and Mrs. Pinchwife, Alithea, Sparkish, and Harcourt -- all characters in this bawdy Restoration Comedy.
Courtly Love was a conception of love, which became a central theme of lyric and epic poetry in France and England. The philosoply of courtly love is made manifest in works like: Chrétien de Troyes's Lancelot (12th cent.), Guillaume de Lorris's Roman de la Rose (13th cent.), and Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde (14th cent.).
(1871-1900) American writer. Stephen Crane is known for his novel about war, "The Red Badge of Courage," even though he never experienced the Civil War.
These sites feature writers and poets such as Shakespeare, Marlowe, Spenser, and More. Find essays and articles on their critical reception.
The crossword puzzle is a popular word game, and books and literature often are part of the solutions... Read more about crossword puzzles, and find related on-line resources.
(1648?-1695) Mexican writer. (Born Juana Inés de Asbaje y Ramirez). Juana Inés de la Cruz was a poet and scholar. Her works include "Flood from the Muses' Springs by the Poetess," "Tenth Muse," "Sister Juana Inés de la Cruz" (1689); "Second Volume of the Works of Sister Juana Inés de la Cruz" (1692); and others.
(1903-1946) American writer. Countee Cullen was a poet, novelist, playwright, and translator. Cullen's works included: "Color" (1925), "Copper Sun" (1927), and "The Ballad of the Brown Girl" (1927).
Greek Mythology. Monsters. They were giants with one eye in the middle of their foreheads.
(1562-1619) British writer. Samuel Daniel's works during the Renaissance include "Delia," "The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses," and the tragedy, "Philotas."
Find information and resources related to Danish literature.
Find information and resources related to Danish Writers.
(1909-1948) Japanese writer. Pseudonym of Tsushima Shuji. Osamu Danzai became "the literary voice of his generation." He's known for works like Shayo (1947, The Setting Sun) and Ningen Shikkaku (1948, No Longer Human).
(1809-1882) British writer. Charles Darwin was a British naturalist and writer, famous for "The Origin of the Species."
(1831-1910) American writer. Rebecca Harding Davis was a pioneer of realist fiction in American literature and a journalist whose social commentary was nationally acclaimed.
Celebrate literature, one day at a time with poems, and much more. Read what famous writers have said about days in literature.
"Death Be Not Proud" is the first line and title of one of John Donne's six Holy Sonnets, but it's also a book by John Gunther, who wrote the memoir in memory of his son.
Death is considered from many different standpoints in literature from around the world. We face death, deal with the death of a loved one, discuss the religious or philosophical significance of death, etc.
Find information and resources related to the Declaration of Independence.
First introduced by French philosopher Jacques Derrida. In Deconstruction, "The entire history of the concept of structure," Derrida argues, "...must be thought of as a series of substitutions of center for center, as a linked chain of determinations of the center" (Bass, Modern Literary Theory 151).
(1660-1731) British writer. As an author of commercial and moral works, Defoe revealed himself as a skilled writer. Defoe's "Essays Upon Literature "(1726) showed that literature can be seen as an industry.
Her novels depict vividly the life in Sardinia. In 1926, she received the Nobel prize for Literature "for her idealistically inspired writings which with plastic clarity picture the life on her native island and with depth and sympathy deal with human problems in general."
Hermann Hess wrote "Demian" in 1919 after a serious of traumatic events: his son was seriously ill, his father died, his wife had a nervous breakdown, etc. "Demian" was published under a pseudonym, Emily Sinclair, and it was immediately successful.
(1809-1831) Indian writer. Henry Louis Vivian Derozio was a journalist and poet. His works include: "Poems" and "The Fakeer of Jungheera." He spearheaded the "Young Bengal" Movement.
(1830-1886) American writer. Although Emily Dickinson published very few poems during her lifetime, Dickinson's poetry is often considered revolutionary.
Find the word you're looking for... or define the term from that literary work.
Boris Pasternak (1890-1960) was a Russian writer during the time of Stalin. He started his most famous novel, "Doctor Zhivago," in the 1930s and finally published it in 1957.
"Don Juan" is a satiric poem, written by British poet Lord Byron (1788-1824). He wrote the poem between 1818-1819 and dedicated it to Robert Southey (who was Poet Laureate). The legend surrounding the character of Don Juan extends beyond Byron's poem.
(c. 1572-1631) For the last decade of his life, John Donne concentrated on writing more sermons than poetry. He's known for poems like: "The Bait" and "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning."
(1896-1970) American writer. John Dos Passos was one of the greatest writers of his time. His works include: "One Man's Initiation" (1917), "Three Soldiers" (1922), and "Manhattan Transfer" (1925).
(1821-1881) Russian writer. His surname is also written: Dostoyevsky or Dostoevskii. Fyodor Dostoevsky was a Russian novelist, journalist, and short-story writer.
(1817-1895) American writer. An escaped slave, Frederick Douglass was the most prominent African American orator, journalist, and antislavery leader of the 19th century.
(1859-1930) British writer. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was a British physician, novelist, and short story writer. He's famous for creating Sherlock Holmes.
Robert Louis Stevenson created "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" in 1885 from a particularly striking nightmare. Famously, Stevenson threw the first version into the fire after his wife read it. He rewrote the book in three days.
Read about the special event which pays homage to such vampires like Dracula and Dark Shadow's Barnabus Collins. Includes photos.
Dragons have appeared in literature from around the world. There's the dragon in Beowulf, the dragons in Chinese mythology, and on down to Tolkien's Smaug...
The dramatic arts have played an important part in world literature since the Greeks first wrote their plays. Read more about how drama and theater have evolved through the centuries.
A dramatic monologue is a lyric poem in which a speaker addresses a silent listener.
(1871-1945) American writer. Theodore Dreiser wrote "Sister Carrie" (1900), "Jennie Gerhardt" (1911), "The Financier" (1912), "The Titan" (1914), "An American Tragedy" (1925), and "The Stoic" (1947).
(1631-1700) British writer. English poet, dramatist, critic. He so dominated the literary scene of his day that it was called the "Age of Dryden;" he was poet laureate, 1668-89.
(1868-1963) American writer. W.E.B. DuBois was an African-American writer, historian, and socialist, famous for "The Souls of Black Folk" (1903).
"Dubliners" is the collection of short stories that James Joyce is known for. He also wrote A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Ulysses, and Finnegans Wake.
(1802-1870) French writer. Alexandre Duman wrote "The Three Musketeers" and "The Count of Monte Cristo." He also wrote plays: "Henry III Et Sa Cour" (1829) and "La Tour de Nesle" (1832).
Find information and resources for Dutch Literature.
John Steinbeck's "East of Eden" was first published in 1952, and the book hasn't been out of print since. The book has also been enormously popular, not only in classrooms, but on the bestseller lists as well. Read more about Steinbeck's "East of Eden."
Writers have written about the Easter holiday for centuries. Some writers focus on the religious aspect of Easter, while others explore other, more secular, aspects of the holiday.
(1832-1916) Spanish writer. Jose Echegaray was a Spanish dramatist, mathematician, economist, and cabinet minister who won the Nobel Prize in 1904.
(1703-1758) American writer. Jonathan Edwards wrote The Freedom of the Will, among other works. He was the third President of Princeton.
The first representations of Egyptian writing appeared around 3000 B.C. Champollion, a Frenchman, was the first to effectively decipher Egyptian hierglyphs in 1812. Egyptian literature was finally opened to the world for the first time. Read more about Egyptian literature.
Gather a background into the land, deities, symbols, and myths from this ancient culture. These pages provide a basic view of Egyptian mythology, summaries of notable gods, and a handy index of all the deities.
(1832-1916) Spanish writer. José Echegaray Y Eizaguirre received the 1904 Nobel Prize in Literature "in recognition of the numerous and brilliant compositions which, in an individual and original manner, have revived the great traditions of the Spanish drama."
(1819-1880) British writer. Pseudonym for Mary Anne Evans. The scope of George Eliot's writing is considerable from "Scenes of Clerical Life" to "Daniel Deronda."
(1888-1965) American/British writer. T.S. Eliot wrote "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," "The Waste Land," and other works.
Ralph Waldo Ellison was born on March 1, 1914 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. He was an African-American writer and teacher. Perhaps his most famous work was The Invisible Man.
(1803-1882) American writer. Ralph Waldo Emerson was an essayist and poet, famous as the leader of the transcendentalist movement. He presented his beliefs quite eloquently in his lectures, but also in his book, "Nature" (1836) among other works.
Jane Austen first published "Emma" in 1815, and the book has been called "a mystery story without a murder." The novel focuses on Emma Woodhouse, who is often compared to Austen's other heroines: Catherine Morland, Marianne Dashwood, and Elizabeth Bennet.
The main figures of the Age of Enlightenment during the 18th century are: Descartes, Pascal, Bayles, Montesquieu, Voltaire, Diderot, and Rousseau.
The Epic of Gilgamesh was written on 12 clay tablets around 2750 and 2500 B.C.
(1634?-1691) British writer. Comical English dramatist and the first important figure in Restoration comedy. His witty "Comical Revenge; or, Love in a Tub" (1664) and "She Wou'd If She Cou'd" (1668) set the tone for the period.
(1846-1926) German writer. Received the 1908 Nobel Prize in Literature "in recognition of his earnest search for truth, his penetrating power of thought, his wide range of vision, and the warmth and strength in presentation with which in his numerous works he has vindicated and developed an idealistic philosophy of life."
(480?-406? BC) Greek writer. His work has great influenced Roman drama, and more recently, he influenced English, German, and French drama.
The evil characters in literature help to create some of the greatest plots in history. Which one is your favorite?
Existentialism involves the attempt to make meaning in a chaotic world. Sartre argued, "man makes himself." As a form of literary criticism, existentialism seeks to analyze literary works, with special emphasis on the struggle to define meaning and identity in the face of alienation and isolation.
Comprehensive information resource on fairy folk. Read fairy poetry, get a guide to Gaelic pronunciation, and access a catalog of fairy trails.
Fairy tales describe the fantastical activities of supernatural creatures: elves, gnomes, nymphs, etc. While traditionally intended for children, fairy tales have also been draw into the field of literary theory. And, how many books are based on the story of "Cinderella" and other fairy tales?
Read about the stories of families: tragedies, triumphs and reconciliations. Crossing oceans and continents, these sagas tell of families who strove to make a better life.
The Fates were three goddesses (Clotho, Lachesis and Atropos). The word "fate" has come to be a force or power that acts upon a character. In the plays like "Oedipus Rex," the king is fated to kill his father and marry his mother.
Just think about what fathers have represented in literature. There have been good, long-suffering fathers, fathers who were murdered by their sons, and so many more. Read more about it!
(1897-1962) American writer. William Faulkner was a renowned Mississippi writer, a Nobel Prize-winning novelist and a short story writer, though he never graduated from high school.
Also called Faustus, or Doctor Faustus, this character has been a continuing legend in Western folklore and literature.
This page provides information and resources related to Feminist Theory and Women's Stuides. This type of criticism can be broadly applied to literary studies.
(1885-1968) American writer. Edna Ferber was a Pulitzer-Prize winning novelist, famous for books like "So Big," "Showboat" (1926), "Cimarron" (1929), "Giant" (1952) and "Ice Palace" (1958).
The term fiction is particularly used in discussion of the novel after the usage of the American novelist Henry James (1843-1916); for example his essay "The Art of Fiction" (1884).
(1707-1754) British writer. Henry Fielding was a highly successful satiric dramatist turned novelist with novels like Tom Jones, his most well-known novel.
Read about writers from around the world, including an A-to-Z listings, listings by countries, by genre, and more.
Find reference information relating to academic programs in literature, anthologies and general resources, classics, literary publishers, literary theory and criticism, literature libraries, and more.
Find resources and articles about literature from around the world: Africa, Albania, America, Australia, Great Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, and far beyond. Read about world literature!
Finnegans Wake is one of the most memorable works by James Joyce. Joyce is also known for Dubliners, for A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and Ulysses.
The study of Finnish Literature begins with Medieval Finland, though few manuscripts survive. Read about the literature of Finland: J.L. Runeberg, Elias Lönnrot, Aleksis Kivi, Zachris Topelius, and others.
Find a fisherman's prayer to the father of sea-life who resembled a walrus, and to whom healing incantations were addressed. Read more about Finnish mythology.
(1896-1940) American writer. F. Scott Fitzgerald's novels and short stories chronicled the change in social attitudes during the 1920s, a period dubbed "The Jazz Age." He is perhaps best known for "The Great Gatsby" (1925).
(1821-1880) French writer. Acclaimed as the "high priest of realism," Gustave Flaubert has also been called the "writer of writers." He is perhaps most famous for "Madame Bovary."
(1884-1915) British writer. James Elroy Flecker was a vice-counsel and writer, famous for his books of poetry: "The Bridge of Fire" (1908), "Thirty-six Poems" (1910), "Forty-two Poems" (1911), "The Golden Journey to Samarkand" (1913), and "The Old Ships" (1915). He died at the age of 30 from tuberculosis.
Flood myths and stories are present in many of the world's myths. The Genesis flood story of Noah and "The Epic of Gilgamesh" are several of the most famous flood myths.
We give flowers, and we sometimes receive them, but how do flowers relate to literature. Read more about roses, daisies, lilies, lilacs, sunflowers, and other flowers in poetry, stories, and other works of literature. It's more than just about romance or love in literature...
Find overviews of the undergraduate and graduate programs in folklore. Also find excerpts from the folklore and mythology newsletter.
Folklore is the transmission of traditional beliefs, myths, tales, and practices. These tales are unwritten literature: stories, prverbs and songs. Folklore is an essential part of every culture.
Reading is one way in which we examine written words in an attempt to grasp meaning. A reading may also include a critical interpretation of a work of literature from a mode or theoretical perspective.
(1878-1970) British writer. Edward Morgan Forster was an British novelist and essayist. His first novel, "Where Angels Fear to Tread" (1905), appeared when Forster was 26 years old.
Robert Browning (British poet) wrote "Fra Lippo Lippi" in 1855. Like "My Last Duchess," this poem is a dramatic monologue. In blank verse, "Fra Lippo Lippi" is based on a 15th-century Florentine monk-painter.
(1844-1924) French writer. Pseudonym for Jacques Anatole Francois Thibault. He is often thought of as the greatest French writer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1921.
(1929-1945) German/Dutch writer. Anne Frank was a German-Jewish teenager who was forced to go into hiding during the Holocaust. She and her family, along with four others, spent 25 months during World War II in an annex of rooms above her father’s office in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Mary Shelley wrote "Frankenstein" in 1816. The book was published in 1818. The story of Victor Frankenstein and his monster has been made into plays, films and comics. It has captivated our imagination, and affected our tales of monsters.
(1706-1790) American writer. Benjamin Franklin was a Boston-born inventor, statesman, patriot, and publisher. He's well-known for his Autobiography, and for his role in the American Revolution (1775-1783).
Among others, you'll find information about Balzac, de Maupassant, and Flaubert, along with a chronology of major periods.
This page provides information and details related to French Literature as it relates to Classic Literature.
Among others, you'll find information about Balzac, de Maupassant, and Flaubert, along with a chronology of major periods.
Discover more about the mythology of France.
Find information about French writers: Honre Balzac, Gustave Flaubert, Guy de Maupassant, and more
(1874-1963) American writer. Robert Frost was one of the greatest American poets of the 20th century. He received the Pulitzer Prize four times.
(1906-1991) Canadian writer. Born Herman Northrop Frye in Quebec. He was an internationally recognized scholar and critic, and contributed a great deal to literary discourse.
(1928- ) Mexican writer. Born in Panama City, Panama, his writing has heavily influenced contemporary Latin American literature.
Find literary fun and games, including trivia, parodies, quizzes, puzzles, activities, quotes, and more. Discover more details about literature. It's unforgettably fun!
(1685-1732) English writer. John Gay was a dramatist and poet during the neoclassical period. His poetry includes: The Shepherd's Week (1714) and Trivia, or the Art of Walking the Streets of London (1716). His plays include The Beggar's Opera (1728).
Find information and resources related to gay, lesbian and queer studies.
Gender theory explores sexuality and difference in gender discussions, as they relate to literary theory.
These pages explore literary genres, including biography, mystery, nature writing, and more.
Find information and resources regarding the lives and works of Nietzsche, Goethe, Marx, Engels, and other writers in German literature.
Access old Germanic stories and accompanying illustrations. Includes short works by Wilhelm Busch and tales from the Grimm brothers.
Discover information about German writers: Bertolt Brecht, Anne Frank, Johann Goethe, Franz Kafka, and more.
Ghost stories aren't just for reading on Halloween. Read about the spooky tales from around the world, including "The Monkey Paw" and other ghoulish tales.
Read more about the mythology surrounding one of the greatest mysteries... There are a great many stories and myths surrounding the Giant Squid.
(1883-1931) Lebanese writer. Kahlil Gibran was a poet, philosopher and artist. He's been compared to William Blake; and his poetry has been translated into more than 20 languages.
(1860-1935) American writer. Charlotte Perkins Gilman was an American feminist and writer, best known for her book "Women and Economics" (1898), which has become a feminist classic.
A guide to the new Globe, with links to other Shakespeare resources.
Celebrate Shakespeare and other writer old and new. Visit the Globe Theatres.
(1756-1836) British writer. William Godwin is known for his radical political views. He published "Enquiry into Political Justice" in 1793, and "The Adventures of Caleb Williams" in 1794. He married Mary Wollstonecraft, and was the father of Mary Shelley.
(1749-1832) German writer. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was a German poet, novelist, playwright, and natural philosopher. He is one of the greatest writers in Western literature, well-known for Faust.
(1730-1774) Irish writer. Oliver Goldsmith was a novelist, poet, essayist, and playwright. He's known for his play "She Stoops to Conquer," and his novel "The Vicar of Wakefield."
The period for Gothic Literature is generally dated from 1764 to 1840, and includes writers like Eliza Parsons, Ann Letitia Akikin Barbauld, Horace Walpole, Thomas Peckett Prest, Ann Radcliffe, and Edgar Allan Poe.
Understanding correct grammar is essential to the study of Classic Literature. You need to know how to write correctly and well, but you also need to know when other writers are using incorrect grammar.
(1716-1771) British writer. Thomas Gray was a forerunner of the Romantic period. Professor of History at Cambridge, his poems include "Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College" (1742) and "Sonnet on the Death of Richard West" (1775).
"The Great Gatsby" is one of F. Scott Fitzgerald's greatest works. The novel was published in 1925, and several of the main characters are: Jay Gatsby, Tom Buchanan, Daisy, and Nick Caraway.
Discover the trials and tributes of the heros. Find information and resources for Classic dramas: "Medea," "Electra," etc.
Find resources and articles related to the literature of the Greek-speaking peoples from about the 8th century.
This page provides information and details related to Greek mythology.
Find information and resources about Greek writers: Aeschylus, Euripides, Homer, Plato, and Sappho.
(1880-1958) American writer. Find a detailed biography of the poet and a selection of well known works.
Learn the tale of Malaguana of Tumon and Gadao of Inarajan, both so strong that they paddled in opposite directions and broke a canoe in two.
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) is an Irish writer, who is famous for his work as a novelist, essayist, and satirist. Perhaps his most famous work is "Gulliver's Travels," which was published in 1726.
A Japanese verse form consisting of three unrhymed lines that together contain a total of 17 syllables.
With everyone dressing like ghosts, goblins, or other monsters and creatures of the night, Halloween is the perfect time to read Gothic fiction, along with other ghostly and strange tales.
Stumped by Hamlet. Browse through these resource pages to learn more . . . or visit the Shakespeare Guide.
(1840-1928) British writer. Thomas Hardy is known for novels which include: "The Return of the Native" (1878), "The Mayor of Casterbridge" (1886), "Tess of the D’Urbervilles" (1891), "Jude the Obscure" (1895), and other works.
The Harlem Renaissance was a movement in American literature that took place in New York City during the 1920s and 30s. Writers included Countee Cullen, W.E.B. Du Bois, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, James Weldon Johnson, Claude McKay, and Jean Tommer.
(1839-1902) American writer. Bret Harte is known for his many short stories about California life.
(1862-1946) German writer. Received the 1912 Nobel Prize in Literature "primarily in recognition of his fruitful, varied and outstanding production in the realm of dramatic art."
The history of Hawaiian literature includes island adventures, nautical South Sea tales, mythology, and much more. Find stories, myths, novels, essays, and so much more.
Read about how the Merman god Puuokamoa was transformed into stone by Maui. Find this and other Hawaiian myths.
(1804-1864) American writer. After an initial period of anonymity during his so-called solitary years from 1825 to 1837, Nathaniel Hawthorne achieved an unfaltering reputation as an author of short stories, romances, essays, and children's books.
(1850-1904) Japanese writer. Born on the Greek island of Lefkas, he moved to Japan in 1889.
When Oscar Wilde first saw "Hedda Gabler" in 1890, he said, "I felt pity and terror, as though the play had been Greek." Compared to Ibsen's earlier plays--"A Doll's House," "Ghosts," and "An Enemy of the People"--"Hedda Gabler" was different. In this play, we find some of Ibsen's most memorable prose in a tragic interplay of psychoscape and linguistic drama.
(1101-1164) French writer. Lover and eventually wife of Peter Abelard, Heloise is known for the letters she wrote to Abelard when she was a nun.
(1899-1961) American writer. Ernest Hemingway is famous for "The Old Man and the Sea," the novel for which he received a Nobel Prize in Literature, but he also created other works, including: "In Our Time" (1925), "The Sun Also Rises" (1926), "A Farewell to Arms" (1929), "For Whom the Bell Tolls," along with other novels, short stories, articles, and more.
(1593-1633) British writer. George Herbert's devotional poems, combining reverence with a homely familiarity with religious experience, were published after his death.
A hero is usually recognized in a work of literature as someone with great courage and strength (although that's not always the case). The hero may risk or sacrifice his or her life for the greater good. Read about heros in literature.
(1877-1962) German writer. Hermann Hesse was a German poet and novelist. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946. He's famous for "Steppenwolf" (1927).
(1830-1914) German writer. Paul Johann Ludwig von Heyse was a German novelist, poet, and dramatist. He received the 1910 Nobel Prize in Literature "as a tribute to the consummate artistry, permeated with idealism, which he has demonstrated during his long productive career as a lyric poet, dramatist, novelist and writer of world-renowned short stories."
Historical fiction is a popular genre because we get to learn something about history while we enjoy a work of fiction.
Holidays are times of celebration and remembrance. With literature, holidays are especially important. They are times of coming together, reliving memories of other days, other moments in and with literature.
(1809-1894) American writer. Born in Cambridge, Mass., he's known for his novels, biographies, poems, and essays.
Holocaust Literature includes the memoirs, poetry, diaries, stories and other works that came out of the Third Reich and World War II. Anne Frank is one of the most famous voice in Holocaust Literature.
Greek writer. Homer is the name traditionally assigned to the author of the Iliad and the Odyssey, the two major epics of Greek antiquity. Very little is known about him.
Find study guides, biography and criticism, and reference material for studying Classic Literature.
(1844-1889) British writer. Gerard Manley Hopkins was a poet during the Victorian period. He created much of his work in the 1870-80s, but he wasn't recognized until 1918.
"The Hound of the Baskerville," a tale of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, was first published in serial form in 1901, then in book form in 1902. It's the story of an age-old curse and it's ramifications to the Bakerville family. Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are on the case!
(1859-1936) British writer. A.E. Housman was born in Fockbury, England in 1859. He was an poet and scholar. Housman published his first collection of poetry, "A Shropshire Lad," at his own expense in 1896.
Reading literature is one of life's most enjoyable experience. If you're feeling lost, or confused, when you read literature, these resources should help you on your way to discovering the joys of literature. Read on...
(1837-1920) American writer. William Dean Howells is known for his literary criticism as well as his novels, which include: A Modern Instance, The Rise of Silas Lapham, Indian Summer, and A Hazard of New Fortunes.
Find a directory of resources related to Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," including texts, study guides and debates about racism and banning the book.
(1802-1885) French writer. Considered one of the greatest French writers of the 19th century, Victor Hugo is well-known as the author of "Les Miserables."
Find information and resources related to humorous interpretations to literature and literary humor.
(1891-1960) American writer. Zora Neale Hurston wrote stories, novels and folklore. Among her works are: Jonah's Gourd Vine (1934), Mules and Men (1935), Tell My Horse (1937), and Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937).
(1894-1963) British writer. Aldous Huxley was an English essayist and novelist, perhaps best known for his Utopian novel, "Brave New World."
(1828-1906) Norwegian writer. Henrik Ibsen was a playwright and poet, well-known for "A Doll's House," "The Wild Duck," and other works.
Since it was settled by Norse Vikings in the 9th century Iceland has been one of Europe's most important centres of literature and art. Read more about the literature.
In "Idylls of the King," Alfred Lord Tennyson presents a view of King Arthur and Camelot. He traces the birth of a king, the building of the Round Table, its existence, its disintegration, and the final passing of the King. He traces the rise and fall of a civilization in scope, writing about love, heroism, and conflict all in relation to a nation.
In 1833, Alfred Lord Tennyson's closest friend died. He was Arthur Hallam, fiance to Tennyson's sister. "In Memoriam"(1850) is an elegy written in honor of Hallam. It's made up of 133 poems -- all written over a 17 year period.
Find resource for the young and old alike, related to Indian and South Asian Literature.
Explore the history, mantras and mythology connected to Indian gods.
Reactions to the influences of industrialization and technological advances appeared in literature of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This page offers related links and resources.
A selection of interviews (in RealAudio and text), primarily with non-fiction authors.
The Irish have created some of the greatest literature of all time. Take a look at some of the information about Irish writers and literature.
Read more about the tales and folklore from Ireland.
Read all about Ireland's literary renaissance, get author biographies, find out about the Abbey Theater, or follow links. The Irish Renaissance covers a period from the 1890s through the 1920s in Ireland.
Read about Irish writers like Francis Bacon, Edmund Burke, William Congreve, Oliver Goldsmith, James Joyce, Frank O'Connor, John O'Keefe, George Bernard Shaw, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, and William Butler Yeats. Learn about their lives and works.
(1783-1859) American writer. Washington Irving was America's first internationally recognized author. He wrote "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," and many other works.
Some writers isolate themselves from society, as they write away in the upper room. This behavior can sometimes be construed as madness or strangeness... Along the same lines, writers have created some of the most remarkable marginalized character, those men and women who stand apart from society. Read more about it.
This page provides information and details related to Italian Classic Literature.
Find information and resources related to Vittorio Alfieri, Dante Alghieri, Thomas Aquinas, Giovanni Boccaccio, Italo Calvino, Guittone d'Arezzo, Grazia Deledda, Cesare Pavese, and others.
(1830-1885) American writer. Ralph Waldo Emerson called Helen Hunt Jackson "the greatest woman poet." She's best known for best known for "Ramona" and "A Century of Dishonor."
(1843-1916) American writer. Henry James wrote 20 novels, 112 stories, 12 plays, and literary criticism. He's famous for "Daisy Miller" (1879) and other works.
Charlotte Bronte wrote her second novel, "Jane Eyre," in 1847. A Bildungsroman, the book follows the development of Jane Eyre from a young child into a young woman. Charlotte Bronte published this Gothic novel under the pseudonym Currer Bell.
Find pages dedicated to Japan's most gifted writers.
Find out how Kanji pronunciation can affect translation, so that Ursa Major, Ooguma, and Ursa Minor, Koguma, can mean either bears or corners.
Discover more about the lives and works of great Japanese writers, including Kobe Abe, Ryunosuke Akutagawa, Osamu Dazai, Shusaku Endo, Kauo Ishiguro, and more.
(1873-1907) French writer. Alfred Jarry was a French playwright and poet, known for his savagely funny dramas, as well as his dissolute and eccentric way of life. Ubi roi was his first play, published in 1896. He also wrote a surrealistic novel: "The Supermale" (1902).
"The Jew of Malta" (ca. 1589-90) was written by Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593). The first two acts of this play are considered among the best Marlowe wrote.
(1849-1909) American writer. Sarah Orne Jewett wrote works that are humorous, sensitive studies of New England life. "A Country Doctor" (1884) is one of her more well-known works. Her masterpiece is "Country of the Pointed Firs."
Read more about the liteature from Jewish Americans, with stories from Jewish immigrants, and including the work of Tillie Olsen and Cynthia Ozick.
If you're looking for a job as a teacher of literature, these resources should start you on your way... Find sites for posting jobs, finding jobs, with tips and tricks that should help you land a a teaching position in your field.
(1709-1784) British writer. He was perhaps the last of the literary dictators.
(1572-1637) British writer. Ben Jonson's first original play, "Every Man in His Humour," was performed in 1598 by the Lord Chamberlain's Company. Jonson became a celebrity.
(1882-1941) Irish writer. James Joyce is one of the greatest literary masters of the 20th century. He's known for his short story series, "Dubliners," for "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man," "Ulysses," and "Finnegans Wake."
(1882-1941) Irish writer. James Joyce is one of the greatest literary masters of the 20th century. He's known for his short story series, "Dubliners," for "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man," "Ulysses," and "Finnegans Wake."
(1342-?) Julian of Norwich was born Lady Juliana. She was a Medieval author and anchoress, who wrote "Revelations of Divine Love."
Published in 1906, Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" is a classic in social protest literature.
Writers like Mark Twain and Robert Louis Stevenson created stories of adventure and intrigue that captures the imagination of the young reader. Other authors include: E.B. White, Lucy Maude Montgomery, Anna Sewell, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Jules Verne, Louisa May Alcott, Lewis Carroll, and others.
Ismail Kadre is the Albanian author of "The Concert" and "The Palace of Dreams," who is published world wide.
(1833-1924) Czech writer. Franz Kafka is considered one of the most significant figures in modern world literature; the term Kafkaesque has come to be applied commonly to grotesque, anxiety-producing social conditions or their treatment in literature. He's known for the "Metamorphosis," along with other short stories and novels.
(1878-1945) German writer. Georg Kaiser's works include: "The Citizens of Calais" (1914), "From Morn to Midnight" (1916), the trilogy "The Coral" (1917), "Gas" (1918), and "Gas II" (1920).
(1885-1957) Greek writer. Nikos Kazantzakis wrote essays, novels, poetry, tragedies, travel books, and much more. He once wrote: "How simple and frugal a thing is happiness: a glass of wine, a roast chestnut, a wretched little brazier, the sound of the sea." (from Zorba the Greek)
(1795-1821) British writer. John Keats is one of the great poets of the Romantic period. His poetry describes the beauty of the natural world and art as the vehicle for his poetic imagination.
(?-1438) British writer. Although little information exists about this writer and mystic, these sites present a good overall view of Margery Kempe's life.
(1929- ) Hungarian writer. Imre Kertész was born in Budapest, Hungary. Of Jewish descent, he was deported to Auschwitz in 1944. He worked at Birkenau until he was liberated in 1945. His first book was "Sorstalanság."
(c.1050-1122) Persian writer. A mathematician and astronomer, Omar Khayyam is remembered for the Rabayat.
(1660-1685) British writer. Anne Killigrew was born just before Charles II's restoration in 1660. Although she was born into a well-known Restoration family, little is known about her life.
(1886-1918) American writer. Joyce Kilmer served as Literary Editor of "The Churchman," and in 1913 was on the staff of "The New York Times."
(1865-1936) British writer. Rudyard Kipling wrote novels, poems and short stories -- mostly set in India and Burma (now known as Myanmar). He was the 1907 Nobel Prize Laureate in Literature "in consideration of the power of observation, originality of imagination, virility of ideas and remarkable talent for narration which characterize the creations of this world-famous author."
Goblins reward virtue and punish greed with their magical mallets that can tap out gold and silver or flatten an intruder. Find this and other myths.
The kraken is a Scandinavian sea monster, possibly with its origins in giant squid sightings. It's also the title of one of Lord Alfred Tennyson's poems, which begins: "Below the thunders of the upper deep..."
(1558-1594) British writer. Thomas Kyd is most well-known for "The Spanish Tragedy" (1589). He also wrote "Cornelia" (1594).
Alfred, Lord Tennyson retells the story of the fair maiden who dies for love in "The Lady of Shallot" (with two versions: 1833 and 1842).
(1634-1693) French writer. Madame de Lafayette once wrote, "One is so weak when he falls in love." Her works include: "La Princesse de Clčves" and "Comtesse de Tende."
(1858-1940) Swedish writer. Selma Otti Lagerlöf turned away from the literary realism and wrote in a romantic and imaginative manner, vividly evoking the peasant life and landscape of Northern Sweden. She received the 1909 Nobel Prize in Literature.
The Lake Poets were a group of English poets: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey, and William Wordsworth. The lived in the "Lake District" in northwestern England. This group was part of the Romantic Movement of the late 1700's and early 1800's.
(1775-1834) British writer. Charles Lamb was an important literary figure. Along with other writers (De Quincey, Leigh Hunt and Hazlit), he revolutionized the form of the essay.
(1330-1387) British writer. "The Vision of Piers Plowman" (around 1362) has been attributed to William Langland, who died in 1400.
Explore links to sites about language and linguistics.
Provides a summary of the development, styles, and themes of Latin American literature.
(1885-1930) British writer. The plays of D.H. Lawrence are much less well known than his novels, short stories, and poems. Read about them all.
Words are representations of writing on the page. Whether you're looking for vocabulary words, or you want to know how classic writers have used words to create masterworks, these resources should help. Read on...
"Leaves of Grass," by Walt Whitman, was first published in 1855, but he republished the collection of poems multiple times, with major rewrites and additions to the text. In his self-described role as the poet of America, Whitman writes the songs of the professions and the land. He also depicted the Civil War, death, longing, and passion, among other themes.
Read more about Washington Irving's tale, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.
(1814-1841) Russian writer. Mikhail Lermontov was born in Moscow. His best-known poem is "The Demon" (1842). Other poems include "The Dream" (1841). He was killed in a duel in 1841, at the age of 27.
(1868-1927) French writer. Gaston Leroux is known for "The Phantom of the Opera" (1910), which has been adapted to film and stage.
Whether you're searching for ideas for a class plan, or you're looking for ideas of what literature to read next, these pages should point you in the right direction. Find lesson plans, syllabi, class ideas, homework-assignment ideas, and much more.
(1898-1963) Irish/British writer. C.S. Lewis was a novelist and critic; he also held the chair of Medieval and Renaissance studies at Cambridge University. He's well-known for his Narnia chronicles.
(1885-1951) Sinclair Lewis was the first American writer to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. He also received the Pulitzer Prize for "Arrowsmith." He's famous for his satirical depictions of American life.
E.M. Forster once said, "We must be willing to let go of the life we have planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for us." Read what writers have to say about this thing called life.
Edgar Allan Poe wrote "Ligeia" in 1838. It's one of his best short stories.
If you're looking for the latest news about classic literature, look no further! These blogs and weblogs feature news, discussions, highlights, articles and more. Take a look!
An encyclopedia is a comprehensive reference source. Literary encyclopedias offer a wide range of resources related to authors, texts, characters, literary history, and more. Read more about literary encyclopedias.
Literary Journals are a useful resource for academic research, but they also offer enjoyable reading in fiction, poetry, essays, etc.
Literary works are peppered with monsters in various forms. You may have loved or detested Grendal, Frankenstein, Dracula, or any of the other monsters...
If you're looking for a textbook, the biography of your favorite author, critical resources about a novel, or you're looking for a novel, collection, or other works of literature, you'll find the publisher here! Read on...
These pages feature large and small companies that publish artistic/literary style books (including literary fiction, nonfiction, poetry, etc.).
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