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Books, 1955-2010
(continued) |
A/III/3 |
History is your own heartbeat. By Michael S. Harper. Urbana and Chicago : University of Illinois Press, [c1971]. |
Deck E |
History of American Psychology. By A.A. Roback. New York : Library Publishers, 1952. |
B/V/5 |
History of Christian philosophy in the Middle Ages. By Etienne Gilson. New York : Random House, [c1955]. |
Deck E |
History of English literature. By H.A. Taine. Translated by Henri Van Laun. New York : A.L. Burt Company, n.d. |
Deck E |
A history of Jazz in America. By Barry Ulanov. New York : The Viking Press, 1952. |
Deck E |
History of mankind: Cultural and scientific development. Volume 2. The ancient world: 1200 BC to AD 500. By Luigi Pareti. Assisted by P. Brezzi and L. Petech Translated from the Italian by Guy E.F. Chilver and Sylvia Chilver. New York : Harper & Row, 1965. |
B/VI/1 |
A History of Rome: from its origin to 529 AD as told by the Roman historians. Edited by Moses Hadas. Garden City, NY : Doubleday, 1956. |
A/VII/5 |
A history of the South. By Comer Vann Woodward. Vol. 9. Origins of the New South, 1877-1913. Louisiana : Louisiana State University Press, 1951. |
A/V/4 |
The history of Tom Jones: A Foundling. By Henry Fielding. Franklin Center, PA : Franklin Library, [c1980]. |
B/I/2 |
Hog butcher. By Ronald L. Fair. New York : Harper, Brace, and World, [c1966]. |
Deck E |
The holy sinner. By Thomas Mann. Translated from the German by H.T. Lowe-Porter. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1951. |
A/II/5 |
Homage to Mistress Bradstreet: a poem. By John Berryman. With Pictures by Ben Shahn. New York : Farrar, Strauss, and Cudahy, [c1956]. |
Deck E |
Home fires: An intimate portrait of one middle-class family in postwar America. By Donald Katz. New York : HarperCollins, 1992. |
Deck E |
Home from the hill. By William Humphrey. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1958. |
Deck E |
Home girls: A Black feminist anthology. Edited by Barbara Smith. New York : Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, Inc., 1983. |
B/II/5 |
The home place. By Wright Morris. New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, [c1948]. [1st edition, 1st printing]. |
B/II/5 |
The home place. By Wright Morris. New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, [c1948]. [1st edition, 1st printing]. |
Deck E |
Home town. By Cleveland Amory. New York : Harper & Brothers, 1950. |
Deck E |
A homemade world: The American modernist writers. By Hugh Kenner. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1975. |
Deck E |
The homeplace: Poems. By Marilyn Nelson Waniek. Baton Rouge, LA : Louisiana State University Press, 1990. |
A/I/4 |
Homme invisible, pour qui chantes-tu? By Ralph Ellison. Translated by Magali and Robert Merle. Preface by Robert Merle. Paris : Bernard Grasset, [c1969]. |
A/I/4 |
Homme invisible, pour qui chantes-tu? By Ralph Ellison. Translated by Magali and Robert Merle. Preface by Robert Merle. Paris : Bernard Grasset, [c1969]. |
B/V/1 |
Homo ludens: a study of the play-element in culture. By Johan Huizinga. Boston : Beacon Press, [1960]. |
Deck E |
Honey Bunch: Her first trip on the ocean. By Helen Louise Thorndyke. Illustrated by Walter S. Rogers. New York : Grosset & Dunlap, 1927. |
Deck E |
The honey-pod tree: The life story of Thomas Calhoun Walker. By Thomas Calhoun Walker. New York : The John Day Company, 1958. |
Deck E |
Honorable amendments: Poems by Michael S. Harper. By Michael S. Harper. Urbana, IL : University of Illinois Press, 1995. |
B/III/3 |
Hope against hope: a memoir. By Nadezhda Mandelstam. Translated from the Russian by Max Hayward. With an introduction by Clarence Brown. New York : Atheneum, 1970. |
Deck E |
Hopi Kachina Dolls: With a key to their identification. By Harold S. Colton. Color photographs by Jack Breed. Albuquerque, NM : University of New Mexico Press, 1959. |
Deck E |
The horn: An authentic and powerful novel about the world of jazz. By John Clellan Holmes. New York : Random House, 1958. |
Deck E |
Horn. By Keith Mano. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Company, 1969. |
Deck E |
The horseman on the roof. By Jean Giono. Translated from the French by Jonathan Griffin. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1954. |
Deck E |
Hot and cool: Jazz short stories. Edited by Marcela Breton. New York : Penguin Books / New American Library, 1990. |
Deck E |
The hottest water in Chicago. By Gayle Pemberton. Boston : Faber and Faber, 1992. |
A/VIII/4 |
Hound and Horn. April-June, 1934. Camden, NJ : The Hound and Horn, Inc., 1934. |
Deck E |
Hours in a library. By Virginia Woolf. New York : Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1957. |
Deck E |
A house in the uplands. By Erskine Caldwell. New York : Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1946. |
Deck E |
The house of breath. By William Goyen. New York : Random House, 1950. |
Deck E |
House of many rooms. By Robin White. New York : Harper & Brothers, 1958. |
Deck E |
The house of mirth. By Edith Wharton. With illustrations by A.B. Wenzell. New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, [c1905]. |
Deck E |
The house of the dead. By Fyodor Dostoevsky. From the Russian by Constance Garnett. New York : The Macmillan Company, 1920. |
Deck E |
The house of the solitary maggot: Part two of the continuous novel Sleepers in Moon-Crowned Valleys. By James Purdy. Garden City, NY : Doubelday & Company, Inc., 1974. |
Deck E |
The housebreaker of Shady Hill and other stories. By John Cheever. New York : Harper & Brothers, 1958. |
A/IV/4 |
How "Bigger" was born: the story of Native Son, one of the most significant novels of our time, and how it came to be written. By Richard Wright. [S.l.] : Harper and Brothers, [c1940]. |
A/IV/4 |
How "Bigger" was born: the story of Native Son, one of the most significant novels of our time, and how it came to be written. By Richard Wright. [S.l.] : Harper and Brothers, [c1940]. |
Deck E |
How came civilization? By Lord Raglan (FitzRoy Richard Somerset). By Baron Raglan. With 8 illustrations and 3 maps. London : Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1939. |
B/VII/3 |
"How does a poem mean?": part three of an introduction to literature. By John Ciardi, Herbert Barros, Hubert Heffner, and Wallace Douglas. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, [c1959]. |
Deck E |
How the dead count. By Judith Johnson Sherwin. New York : W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1978. |
A/V/3 |
How to abandon ship. By Philip Richards and John J. Banigan. New York : Cornell Maritime Press, 1942. |
B/V/4 |
How to become a musical critic. By Bernard Shaw. Edited with an introduction by Dan H. Laurence. New York : Hill and Wang, [c1961]. |
Deck E |
How to teach your baby to read: The gentle revolution. By Glenn Doman. New York : Random House, 1964. |
Deck E |
How to travel incognito. By Ludwig Bemelmans. Boston : Little, Brown and Company, 1952. |
B/VI/5 |
How to write a play: the principles of play construction applied to creative writing and to the understanding of human motives. By Lajos Egri. With an introduction by Gilbert Miller. New York : Simon and Schuster, 1942. |
B/V/4 |
How to write. By Gertrude Stein. Barton : Something Else Press, 1973. |
Deck E |
Howard Street. By Nathan C. Heard. New York : The Dial Press, 1968. |
A/IV/5 |
Human being: a story. By Christopher Morley. Garden City, NY : Doubleday, Dolan and Co., 1934. |
B/VI/5 |
The human image in dramatic literature. By Francis Fergusson. Garden City, NY : Doubleday, [c1957]. |
B/III/4 |
The human mind. By Karl A. Menninger. New York : Literary Guild of America, 1930. |
B/V/5 |
Human nature: a first book in psychology. By Max Schoen. New York : Harper and Brothers, [n.d.]. |
B/VII/5 |
The human use of human beings: cybernetics and society. By Norbert Wiener. Garden City, NY : Doubleday and Co., [1954]. |
Deck E |
Hustling and other hard work in the ghetto. By Bettylou Valentine. New York : The Free Press / The Macmillan Company, 1978. |
A/III/2 |
I am the American Negro. By Frank Marshall Davis. Chicago, IL : Black Cat Press, 1937. |
Deck E |
I am! Says the lamb: A joyous book of sense and nonsense verse. By Theodore Roethke. Illustrated by Robert Leydenfrost. Garden City, NY : Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1961. |
A/V/2 |
"I do so politely": a voice from the South. By Robert Canzoneri. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1965. |
Deck E |
I hear America Talking: An illustrated treasury of American words and phrases. By Stuart Berg Flexner. New York : Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1976. |
Deck E |
I knock at the door: Swift glances back at things that made me. By Sean O'Casey. New York : The Macmillan Company, 1939. |
Deck E |
I see by my outfit. By Peter S. Beagle. New York : The Viking Press, 1965. |
Deck E |
I thought of Daisy. By Edmund Wilson. New York : Farrar, Straus and Young, Inc., 1953. |
Deck E |
I, Charlotte Forten, Black and free. By Polly Longsworth. New York : Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1970. |
Deck E |
I, my ancestor. By Nancy Wilson Ross. New York : Random House, 1950. |
B/V/4 |
I'm a stranger here myself. By Ogden Nash. Boston : Little, Brown and Co., [c1938]. |
Deck E |
I'm Katherine, a memoir. By W. Warren Harper. [S.l.] : [s.n.], 1995. |
B/V/1 |
Iago: some approaches to the illusion of his motivation. By Stanley Edgar Hyman. New York : Atheneum, 1970. |
Deck E |
Ibsen: Letters and speeches. By Henrik Ibsen. Edited by Evert Sprinchorn. London : MacGibbon & Kee, 1965. |
B/VI/5 |
The idea of a theater: a study of ten plays, the art of drama in changing perspective. By Francis Fergusson. Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press, 1949. |
B/VII/1 |
The ideal reader: selected essays. By Jacques Riviére. Edited, translated, and introduced by Blanche A. Price. New York : Meridian Books, [1960]. |
A/VIII/2 |
The idiot. By Fyodor Dostoevsky. Translated with an introduction by David Magarshak. Baltimore : Penguin Books, [1955]. |
Deck E |
The idiot. By Fyodor Dostoevsky. Illustrated by Boardman Robinson. Translated from the Russian by Constance Garnett. New York : The Modern Library, 1942. |
A/IV/1 |
Idiots first. By Bernard Malamud. New York : Farrar, Strauss, and Co., [1963]. |
B/I/2 |
The idols and the prey. By John Goodwin. New York : Harper and Brothers, [c1953]. |
Deck E |
If Beale Street could talk. By James Baldwin. New York : The Dial Press, 1974. |
A/III/3 |
If he hollers let him go: a novel. By Chester Himes. Garden City, NY : Doubleday, Dolan and Co., 1945. |
A/III/3 |
If he hollers let him go. By Chester Himes. New York : Signet, [1949]. |
A/VI/1 |
If he hollers let him go. By Chester Himes. New York : Signet, [1949]. |
Deck E |
If morning ever comes. By Anne Tyler. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1964. |
B/I/1 |
If we must die. By Junius Edwards. Garden City, NY : Doubleday, 1963. |
A/VIII/5 |
The Iliad. By Homer. Translated by Richmond Lattimore. Drawings by Leonard Baskin. Chicago : University of Chicago Press, [1962]. |
B/III/5 |
Illuminations. By Walter Benjamin. Edited and with an introduction by Hannah Arendt. Translated by Harry Zohn. New York : Harcourt, Brace, and World, [c1968]. |
B/IV/3 |
Illusion and reality: a study of the sources of poetry. By Christopher Caudwell. London : Macmillan and Co., 1937. |
Deck E |
Illusion in Java. By Gene Fowler. New York : Random House, 1939. |
Deck E |
The illusionless man: fantasies and meditations. By Allen Wheelis. New York : W.W. Norton, [c1966]. |
A/II/5 |
The illusions of a nation: myth and history in the novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald. By John F. Callahan. Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [c1972]. |
Deck E |
An illustrated history of Black Americans. By John Hope Franklin. New York : Time-Life Books, 1970. |
Deck E |
An illustrated history of Black Americans. By John Hope Franklin. New York : Time-Life Books, 1970. |
Deck E |
Ilyitch slept here. By Henry Carlisle. New York : J.B. Lippincott Company, 1965. |
Deck E |
Ilyitch slept here. By Henry Carlisle. New York : J.B. Lippincott Company, 1965. |
B/VI/4 |
Image and idea: twenty essays on literary themes. By Philip Rahv. Revised and enlarged edition. Norfolk, CT : New Directions Paperbook, [1957]. |
A/II/5 |
The image: a guide to pseudo-events in America. By Daniel J. Boorstin. New York : Harper and Row, [c1961]. |
B/V/5 |
The image: knowledge in life and society. By Kenneth E. Boulding. Ann Arbor, MI : University of Michigan Press, [1961]. |
A/III/3 |
Images of Kin: new and selected poems. By Michael S. Harper. Urbana and Chicago : University of Illinois Press, [c.1977]. |
B/IV/3 |
Images of the Negro in American literature. Edited by Seymour L. Gross and John Edward Hardy. Chicago : University of Chicago Press, [1966]. |
A/IV/4 |
Images of truth: remembrances and criticism. By Glenway Wescott. New York : Harper and Row, [c1962]. |
B/I/4 |
Imaginary interviews. By Andre Gide. Translated from the French by Malcolm Cowley. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1944. |
Deck E |
Imamu Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones): A collection of critical essays. Edited by Kimberly W. Benston. Englewood Cliffs, NJ : Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1978. |
Deck E |
Immigration and the American tradition. Edited by Moses Rischin. The American Heritage Series. Indianapolis : The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., 1976. |
Deck E |
The immoralist. By Andre Gide. Translated from the French by Dorothy Bussy. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1948. |
B/IV/1 |
The imperial theme: further interpretations of Shakespeare's tragedies, including the Roman plays. By G. Wilson Knight. New York : Barnes and Noble, [1963]. |
A/VII/4 |
Impressions of Lincoln and the Civil War: a foreigner's account. By Marquis Adolphe de Chambrun. Translated from the French by General Aldebert de Chambrun. New York : Random House, [c1952]. |
Deck E |
In a time between wars: Poems. By Milton Kaplan. New York : W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1973. |
Deck E |
In any case. By Richard G. Stern. New York : McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1962. |
Deck E |
In deep. By Bernard Wolfe. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1957. |
B/VII/5 |
In dubious battle. By John Steinbeck. New York : Modern Library, [1939]. |
Deck E |
In my place. By Charlayne Hunter-Gault. New York : Farrar Straus Giroux, 1992. |
Deck E |
In orbit. By Wright Morris. New York : New American Library, Inc., 1966. |
B/II/1 |
In our time. By Ernest Hemingway. New York : Horace Liveright, 1925. |
B/I/5 |
In red and black: Marxian Explorations in Southern and Afro-American History. By Eugene D. Genovese. New York : Pantheon Books, [c1971]. |
Deck E |
In search of Diaghilev. By Richard Buckle. London : Sidgwick and Jackson, 1955. |
B/VII/3 |
In search of heresy: American literature in an age of conformity. By John W. Aldridge. New York : McGraw-Hill, [c1956]. |
B/IV/2 |
In search of theater. By Eric Russell Bentley. New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1953. |
Deck E |
In Sicily. By Elio Vittorini. Introduction by Ernest Hemingway. Translated by Wilfrid David. New York : New Directions / James Laughlin, 1949. |
A/II/3 |
In the African-American grain: call-and-response in 20th-century black fiction. By John F. Callahan. Middletown, CT : Wesleyan University Press, 1990 [c1988]. |
Deck E |
In the African-American Grain: The pursuit of voice in twentieth-century Black fiction. By John F. Callahan. Urbana and Chicago, IL : University of Illinois Press, 1988. |
B/IV/5 |
In the American jungle, 1924-1936. By Waldo Frank. Photographic decorations by William H. Field. New York : Farrar and Rinehart, [c1937]. |
B/II/3 |
In the cage and other tales. By Henry James. Edited and with an introduction by Morton Dauwen Zabel. Garden City, NY : Doubleday and Co., 1958. |
B/II/4 |
In the castle of my skin. By George Lamming. With an introduction by Richard Wright. New York : McGraw-Hill., [c1953]. |
A/VI/5 |
In the hills where her dreams live: poems for Chile, 1973-1980. By Andrew Salkey. Sausolito, CA : Black Scholars Press, [c1981]. |
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