Excursions
Author: Henry D. Thoreau
Edition: First
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Pages: 672
Price: £38.95
ISBN 9780691064505
This presents newly edited texts of nine essays - including some of Thoreau's most popular and engaging works - drawing from his writing career between 1842 and 1862. The collection highlights Thoreau's early use of themes and approaches that recur throughout his work, including explorations of internal and external geography.
Salman Rushdie
Author: Andrew Teverson
Edition: First
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Pages: 256
Price: £45.00 and £11.99
ISBN 9780719070501 and 0518
This guide by Teverson, lecturer in English at Kingston University, examines the intellectual, biographical, literary and cultural contexts of Rushdie's fiction with detailed critical readings of all of his novels. It will be of interest to students of postcolonial studies and 20th- and 21st-century British literature.
Douglas Coupland
Author: Andrew Tate
Edition: First
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Pages: 192
Price: £50.00 and £14.99
ISBN 9780719074882 and 6619
This is the first full-length study of the work of the Canadian novelist, covering the prolific first 15 years of his career, in which he published ten novels and four volumes of non-fiction. Tate, lecturer in English at Lancaster University, focuses on Coupland's engagement with narrative, consumer culture, space, religion and ideas of the future.
Paul Auster
Author: Mark Brown
Edition: First
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Pages: 224
Price: £50.00 and £14.99
ISBN 9780719073960 and 3977
In providing an analysis of Auster's essays, poetry, fiction, films and collaborative projects, Brown, a lecturer in American literature at Keele University, explores key themes of identity; language and writing; metropolitan living and community; and storytelling and illusion.
R.K. Narayan
Author: John Thieme
Edition: First
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Pages: 240
Price: £50.00 and £11.99
ISBN 9780719059261 and 98
Thieme, visiting professor of literature at the University of East Anglia, offers a wide-ranging guide to the fiction of a man considered one of the founding figures of Indian literature, viewing the work in terms of South Indian contexts, cultural geography and non-Indian intertexts.
How to Read the Victorian Novel
Author: George Levine
Edition: First
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Pages: 200
Price: £50.00 and £12.99
ISBN 9781405130554 and 0561
This is a broad-ranging introduction to the genre using examples from the classics. Levine, the Kenneth Burke professor of English at Rutgers University in New Jersey, surveys a variety of literary types and explores the cultural and historical developments of the novel form itself.
The Importance of Feeling English: American Literature and the British Diaspora, 1750-1850
Author: Leonard Tennenhouse
Edition: First
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Pages: 170
Price: £19.95
ISBN 9780691096810
In revisiting the landscape of early American literature, The Importance of Feeling English radically revises its features. Tennenhouse, professor of English at Brown University, Rhode Island, focuses on the concept of transatlantic circulation and shows how some of the first American authors applied their perspective to existing British literary models.