ABSTRACT
This set comprises 40 volumes covering nineteenth and twentieth century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes.
This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |16 pages
Introduction
part |36 pages
Early Novels and Prose Writings
chapter 1|1 pages
Unsigned review of The Shifting of the Fire, Athenaeum
No. 3395, 19 November 1892, 700
chapter 2|3 pages
Joseph Conrad on The Inheritors
Letter to the editor, The New York Times Saturday Review, 24 August 1901, 603
chapter 5|2 pages
‘A Romance of Two Worlds': C. F. G. Masterman on An English Girl
Daily News, 28 September 1907, 3
chapter 9|4 pages
Percy F. Bicknell on Memories and Impressions (Ancient Lights), Dial
1, 1 May 1911, 345-6
chapter 10|2 pages
Unsigned review of The New Humpty-Dumpty by ‘Daniel Chaucer', English Review
xii, September 1912, 332
chapter 11|3 pages
‘The Quest of the Golden Bowl', unsigned review of Henry James: A Critical Study
The Times Literary Supplement, 22 January 1914, 38
chapter 13|5 pages
‘The Saddest Story': Theodore Dreiser on The Good Soldier
New Republic, iii, 12 June 1915, 155-6
chapter 14|3 pages
‘The Novelist in Controversy': Rebecca West on Between St. Dennis and St. George
Daily News, 11 November 1915, 4
part |15 pages
Collected Poems (1913)
chapter 18|7 pages
‘Mr. Hueffer and the Prose Tradition in Verse': Ezra Pound, review in Poetry
iv, June 1914, 111-20
part |9 pages
On Heaven and Poems Written on Active Service
chapter 19|5 pages
‘The Function of Rhythm': Conrad Aiken, review in Dial
lxv, 16 November 1918, 417-18
part |8 pages
Collected Poems (1936)
chapter 21|5 pages
Introduction by William Rose Benét to Collected Poems (1936)
Oxford University Press, New York, vii-xi
part |30 pages
The Tietjens Novels
chapter 25|2 pages
‘An Angry Novel': Joseph Wood Krutch on Some Do Not
Saturday Review of Literature, i, 18 October 1924, 197
chapter 27|3 pages
‘New Worlds and Old': Mary Colum on No More Parades
Saturday Review of Literature, ii, 30 January 1926, 523
chapter 28|4 pages
‘Contemporary Reminiscences': Burton Rascoe on No More Parades
Arts and Decoration, xxiv, February 1926, 57
chapter 29|2 pages
Unsigned review of A Man Could Stand Up, The Times Literary Supplement
14 October 1926
chapter 30|4 pages
‘Don Quixote in the Trenches': Isabel Paterson on Some Do Not, No More Parades and A Man Could Stand Up
New York Herald Tribune Books, 17 October 1926, 5
chapter 31|2 pages
L. P. Hartley on A Man Could Stand Up, Saturday Review
cxlii, 15 November 1926, 592
chapter 32|4 pages
‘Tietjens Once More': William McFee on Last Post
New York Herald Tribune Books, 15 January 1928, 3
chapter 34|1 pages
‘Recent tendencies in English fiction': H. C. Harwood on Last Post and other novels of the time
Quarterly Review, cclii, April 1929, 327
part |14 pages
Miscellaneous Controversies
chapter 35|5 pages
‘Mr. Madox Hueffer's Inaccuracies': W. M. Rossetti on Ancient Lights
Letter to the editor of Outlook, xxvii, 22 April 1911, 507-8
chapter 36|3 pages
‘Mr. Hueffer and his Cellar Garnis': J. K. Prothero on Zeppelin Nights
New Witness, vii, 6 January 1916, 293
chapter 37|3 pages
Correspondence concerning Prothero's review of Zeppelin Nights
New Witness, vii, 13 January 1916, 321; vii, 20 January 1916, 352; vii, 27 January 1916, 385; vii, 3 February 1916, 416; vii, 10 February 1916, 449; letter by H. G. Wells printed in Maisie Ward, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, London, 1944, 350-2
chapter 38|3 pages
‘A Footnote to Hueffer' and ‘Another Criticism': H. G. Wells and Ethel Colburn Mayne on Thus to Revisit
Letters to the editor of the English Review, xxxi, August 1920, 178-9
part |17 pages
Joseph Conrad: A Personal Remembrance
chapter 39|2 pages
Mrs. Joseph Conrad, letter to the editor of The Times Literary Supplement
4 December 1924, 826
chapter 40|4 pages
‘Romantic Biography': Edward Garnett, Nation & Athenaeum
xxxvi, 6 December 1924, 366, 368
chapter 41|4 pages
‘A Cross Section': Christopher Morley, Saturday Review of Literature
i, 27 December 1924, 415
chapter 42|2 pages
‘Instructive and Amusing': Edward Garnett, Weekly Westminster
14 February 1925, 473
part |38 pages
Later Fiction, Reminiscences and Criticism
chapter 45|4 pages
‘A Matter of Form': J. Middleton Murry on Thus to Revisit
Nation & Athenaeum, xxix, 28 May 1921, 328-9
chapter 46|2 pages
L. P. Hartley, review of A Little Less Than Gods, Saturday Review
cxlvi, 24 November 1928, 692, 694
chapter 47|4 pages
‘The Career of Ford Madox Ford': Morton Dauwen Zabel on Return to Yesterday
New York Nation, cxxxiv, 6 April 1932, 403-4
chapter 48|2 pages
V. S. Pritchett, review of It Was the Nightingale, Fortnightly Review
cxxxvi, July 1934, 122
chapter 49|2 pages
‘The Landowner in Revolt': Graham Greene on Great Trade Route
London Mercury, xxxv, February 1937, 422-4
chapter 50|2 pages
‘A Veteran at Play': Graham Greene on Vive Le Roy
London Mercury, xxxvi, August 1937, 389-90
chapter 51|3 pages
‘Impressions of the “Impressionists”': V. S. Pritchett on Mightier than the Sword
London Mercury, xxxvii, March 1938, 550-1
chapter 52|2 pages
‘Mightier than Most Pens': Charles Williams on Mightier than the Sword
Time and Tide, xix, 12 March 1938, 350
chapter 53|3 pages
‘A History of Writing': John Peale Bishop on The March of Literature
New Republic, xcvi, 26 October 1938, 339-40
chapter 54|3 pages
‘The Good Life': Graham Greene on Provence
London Mercury, xxxix, December 1938, 217-18
chapter 55|3 pages
‘A Bore to End Bores': Edward Sackville-West on The March of Literature
New Statesman and Nation, xviii, 4 November 1939, 654
chapter 56|2 pages
‘Last Journey': Graham Greene on The March of Literature
Spectator, clxiii, 17 November 1939, 696
chapter 57|6 pages
‘A Literary Banqueter: With Madox Ford Through the Ages': unsigned review of The March of Literature
The Times Literary Supplement, 9 December 1939, 716, 721
part |45 pages
General Articles on Ford
chapter 58|8 pages
‘Ford Madox Ford: A Portrait in Impressions': Herbert Gorman, New York Bookman
lxvii, March 1928, 56-60
chapter 59|11 pages
‘Ford Madox Ford—A Neglected Contemporary': Granville Hicks New York Bookman
lxxii, December 1930, 364-70
chapter 60|8 pages
‘Portrait of an Editor': Douglas Goldring, English Review
liii, December 1931, 820-9
chapter 63|3 pages
Sherwood Anderson on Ford Madox Ford
‘The Legacies of Ford Madox Ford', Coronet, viii, August 1940, 135-6 New Directions Number 7, 1942, 458-9
chapter 66|4 pages
Allen Tate on Ford Madox Ford
New Directions Number 7, 1942, 487-8 ‘Random Thoughts on the 1920s‘, Minnesota Review, i, 1960, 51-3
part |37 pages
Later Evaluations
chapter 67|9 pages
Edward Crankshaw on Douglas Goldring's The Last Pre-Raphaelite, National Review
cxxxi, August 1948, 160-7
chapter 68|6 pages
R. A. Scott-James, preface to the Tietjens novels
chapter 69|4 pages
Morton Dauwen Zabel on Trained for Genius (The Last Pre-Raphaelite)
Nation, clxix, July 1949, 110-11
chapter 70|8 pages
William Carlos Williams on Parade's End, Sewanee Review
lxix, January-March 1951, 154-61
chapter 71|6 pages
Caroline Gordon, A Good Soldier
From ‘A Good Soldier', Chapbook Number 1, University of California Library, Davis, 1963