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inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
Building on the work of former and contemporary scholars, My Wars Are Laid Away in Books brings to light a wide range of new material from legal archives, congregational records, contemporary women's writing, and previously unpublished ...
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
Paying special attention to her experience of faith, Lundin relates Dickinson's life -- as it can be charted through her poems and letters -- to nineteenth-century American political, social, religious, and intellectual history.
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
White Heat is the first book to portray the remarkable relationship between America's most beloved poet and the fiery abolitionist who first brought her work to the public.
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
Gone is Emily as lonely spinster; here is Dickinson in her own words, passionate and fully alive. Praise for Open Me Carefully “With spare commentary, Smith . . . and Hart . . . let these letters speak for themselves.
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
This biography, the first comprehensive work on Howells in fifty years, enters the consciousness of the man and his times, revealing a complicated and painfully honest figure who came of age in an era of political corruption, industrial ...
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
William and Dorothy Wordsworth is the first literary biography of the Wordsworths' creative collaboration.
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
Revealing how thoroughly Wordsworth shared his inner and passional life with Mary, this volume puts to rest the notion that theirs was a marriage of convenience.
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
Tracing a year in the garden, the book reveals details few know about Dickinson and adds to our collective understanding of who she was as a person.
inauthor: William Dickinson from books.google.com
Biography of twentieth-century poet Sara Teasdale, drawing from personal papers that had been withheld from publication for nearly fifty years after her death to reconstruct her tragic history, and including samples of her poetry and prose.