Author | William Jeremiah Burke and Will D. Howe (1st edition) Irving Weiss (2d edition) Irving Weiss and Anne Weiss (3d edition) |
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Publisher | Gramercy Publishing Company (1st edition) Crown Publishing Group (2d and 3d editions) |
Publication date | 1943, 1962, 1972 |
American Authors and Books is a reference work about American literature. Editions, with varying subtitles, were published in 1943, 1962, and 1972.
The first edition, American Authors and Books: 1640–1940, edited by William Jeremiah Burke and Will D. Howe, [1] was published in 1943 by Gramercy Publishing Company (now part of Crown Publishing Group). [2] [3] The 1943 edition ran to 858 pages. [2] When the first edition was published, both Burke and Howe were on staff at Charles Scribner's Sons. [4]
A review by Rollo G. Silver in American Literature compared the first edition to The Oxford Companion to American Literature , edited by James D. Hart, but noted that American Authors listed far more people than the Companion. [2] Booklist likewise compared the 1943 American Authors to the Companion, describing it as a "quick reference tool". [5]
A second edition, updated by Irving Weiss, was released by Crown Publishers in 1962. [1] Weiss's edition updated the book to include entries from 1940 to shortly before the new edition was published. [6] A review by John Barkham upon the publication of the second edition described American Authors as a "widely-used reference text to American writing". [6]
Crown published the third edition, titled American Authors and Books: 1640 to the Present Day, in 1972. It was updated and revised by Irving Weiss and Anne Weiss. [7] This edition contained around 17,000 entries about authors, publications, and publishers, among other topics, [8] and had 719 pages. The third edition had some errors but was generally of "high quality". [9]
Who's Who is a reference work. It is a book, and also a CD-ROM and a website, giving information on influential people from around the world. Published annually as a book since 1849, it lists people who influence British life, according to its editors. Entries include notable figures from government, politics, academia, business, sport and the arts. Who's Who 2022 is the 174th edition and includes more than 33,000 people.
Gordon Alexander Craig was a Scottish-American liberal historian of German history and of diplomatic history.
Booklist is a publication of the American Library Association that provides critical reviews of books and audiovisual materials for all ages. Booklist's primary audience consists of libraries, educators, and booksellers. The magazine is available to subscribers in print and online. Booklist is published 22 times per year, and reviews over 7,500 titles annually. The Booklist brand also offers a blog, various newsletters, and monthly webinars. The Booklist offices are located in the American Library Association headquarters in Chicago’s Gold Coast neighborhood.
Readers' advisory is a service which involves suggesting fiction and nonfiction titles to a reader through direct or indirect means. This service is a fundamental library service; however, readers' advisory also occurs in commercial contexts such as bookstores. Currently, almost all North American public libraries offer some form of readers' advisory.
Mary Tappan Wright (1851–1916) was an American novelist and short story writer best known for her acute characterizations and depictions of academic life. She was the wife of classical scholar John Henry Wright and the mother of legal scholar and utopian novelist Austin Tappan Wright and geographer John Kirtland Wright.
Padma Tiruponithura Venkatraman, also known as T. V. Padma, is an Indian American author. Before she became an award-winning novelist, she spent time on and under the oceans, acted as chief scientist on research vessels, directed a school in England and led diversity efforts at a university.
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Contemporary Authors is a reference work that has been published by Gale since 1962. The work provides short biographies and bibliographies of contemporary and near-contemporary writers and is a major source of information on over 116,000 living and deceased authors from around the world. The work is a standard in libraries and has been honored by the American Library Association as a distinguished reference title.
Madeline Frank Brandeis was an American writer of children's books, a film producer and director.
Deborah Smith Howe was an American children's writer and actress. She and her husband James Howe wrote two books, Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery and Teddy Bear's Scrapbook, but she died of cancer at age 31 before they were published in 1979 and 1980, respectively.
Theodore Russell Weiss was an American poet, and literary magazine editor.
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Mission: Earth, Voyage to the Home Planet is a children's literature book by science writer June A. English and astronaut Thomas David Jones that was published in 1996 by Scholastic. Jones was among the crew members of the Space Shuttle Endeavour during an eleven-day mission in space, which was launched in April 1994 to study the ecological well-being of Earth using specialized radar technology. The book, which is illustrated with radar images and picturesque photographs, chronicles the mission and Jones' experiences of it.
Elizabeth Wooster Stuart Phelps (1815–1852) was an American writer of religiously themed articles, adult domestic fiction and books for children. She wrote eleven books as well as numerous articles and stories that were translated and published in many languages, and probably many more works that appeared anonymously. Phelps wrote "at the beginning of the transition in American women's writing from domestic sentimentality to regional realism" and was "among the earliest depicters of the New England scene, antedating the regional novels of her Andover neighbor, Harriet Beecher Stowe". In addition to being one of the earliest known authors to have penned a fiction series specifically for girls, her writing also focused on the burdens on women in their restrictive roles as mothers and wives. Her much anthologized 1852 semi-autobiographical short story, "The Angel Over the Right Shoulder", illustrates the repressive burdens frustrating a wife's creative ambitions and need to "cultivate her own mind and heart". The story is notable as "one of the rare woman's fictions of this time to recognize the phenomenon of domestic schizophrenia", says literary critic Nina Baym.
As of 2018, several firms in the United States rank among the world's biggest publishers of books in terms of revenue: Cengage Learning, HarperCollins, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, McGraw-Hill Education, Scholastic, Simon & Schuster, and Wiley.
Margaret Ross Griffel is an American musicologist and author.
Jacob Nathaniel Blanck was an American bibliographer, editor, and children's writer. Born in Boston, he attended local schools and briefly ran a bookshop before being hired to assist on a bibliography of American first editions. He wrote in periodicals on the book trade and worked as a bibliographer in libraries including the Library of Congress in the 1940s and 1950s. Blanck also published two children's books. In the early 1940s, he founded a bibliography project that became Bibliography of American Literature, a selective bibliography of American literature. It was completed by 1992, after Blanck's death.
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