A Nathaniel Hawthorne Encyclopedia
By (Author) Robert L. Gale
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th March 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Reference works
813.3
Hardback
608
This volume offers the serious student of Nathaniel Hawthorne a comprehensive guide to all available primary and secondary data on his life and works. The encyclopaedia presents, in one alphabetized sequence, approxomately 1500 entries that identify all of Hawthorne's characters, summarize the plots of his fiction and the substance his essays, and introduce his family members, friends and associates. A chronological listing of the events in Hawthorne's life documents the personal relationships and richly diverse experiences that were reflected in his numerous stories, reviews, poems, nonfiction pieces, letters and notebooks. Many of these were widely acclaimed; but dozens were overlooked until now; all, are carefully cited in the encyclopaedia. Nine appendixes index Hawthorne's writings according to genre as well as the important people on his life by their relationship to him, whether personal or professional, casual or official.
ROBERT L. GALE is Professor Emeritus of American Literature at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of Caught Image: Figurative Language in Henry James, The Henry James Encyclopedia (Greenwood Press, 1989), Thomas Crawford and of critical biographies of Richard Henry Dana, Jr., Francis Parkman, John Hay, Luke Short, Henry W. Allen, and Louis L'Amour. His essays have appeared in a wide range of scholarly journals.