Sherwood Anderson: a bibliography

By Kenneth A. Lohf and Eugene P. Sheehy

The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sherwood Anderson: a bibliography, by
Eugene P. Sheehy

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
using this eBook.

Title: Sherwood Anderson: a bibliography

Authors: Eugene P. Sheehy
         Kenneth A. Lohf

Release Date: June 4, 2023 [eBook #70906]

Language: English

Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
             https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images
             made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHERWOOD ANDERSON: A
BIBLIOGRAPHY ***






_SHERWOOD ANDERSON: A BIBLIOGRAPHY_




[Illustration: _Sherwood Anderson_

Photograph by Edward Steichen, August, 1926]




                            Sherwood Anderson
                             _A Bibliography_

                              _COMPILED BY_
                    EUGENE P. SHEEHY & KENNETH A. LOHF

                              [Illustration]

                           _THE TALISMAN PRESS_
                      _Los Gatos, California_ _1960_

                      © _1960 by_ THE TALISMAN PRESS

             Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 60-53225




_Contents_


    PREFACE                                                xiv

     I. WORKS BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON

        Individual Works                                    18

        Essays and Stories                                  43

        Introductions and Forewords                         44

        Letters                                             45

        Dramatizations                                      46

        Contributions to Periodicals                        47

        Serial Publications Edited by Anderson              66

        Smyth County News Contributions                     67

    II. WRITINGS ABOUT SHERWOOD ANDERSON

        Books, Parts of Books and Periodical Articles       74

        Poems, Parodies, and Miscellaneous Items           104

        Reviews                                            105

    INDEX                                                  118




“Gertrude Stein contended that Sherwood Anderson had a genius for using
the sentence to convey a direct emotion, this was in the great american
tradition, and that really except Sherwood there was no one in America
who could write a clear and passionate sentence.”

                                  —_The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas._

[Illustration: Manuscript page from _Winesburg, Ohio_.

From the Anderson Collection in the Newberry Library, Chicago.]

[Illustration: Binding of _Windy McPherson’s Son_, Anderson’s first book.
[Item 1]]




_Illustrations_


    PORTRAIT OF SHERWOOD ANDERSON          _Facing title-page_

    MANUSCRIPT PAGE FROM _Winesburg, Ohio_           _Page 11_

    BINDING OF _Windy McPherson’s Son_       _Facing Opposite_

    _Winesburg, Ohio_ TITLE-PAGE, FIRST EDITION      _Page 21_




_Preface_


Although an examination of Sherwood Anderson’s biography would reveal
various careers—that of laborer, manager of a paint factory, advertising
writer, short story writer, novelist, poet, essayist, and newspaper
editor—it is as a writer of short stories that he has made his most
significant contribution to American letters. His concentration on form
rather than plot was a key factor in liberating the American short
story from the confining techniques of writers in the genteel tradition
who were in vogue when Anderson was writing his first novel, _Windy
McPherson’s son_ (1916).

Anderson’s first important work, and possibly his finest, was _Winesburg,
Ohio_ (1919), a collection of stories about the inhabitants of a small
town who did not fit into the accepted pattern of community life. In
these sketches his concern was with the failures rather than with the
successful. Anderson told their tales with compassion and sympathy,
and, through his characters’ maimed or suppressed emotions, he lent
significance to neglected aspects of life in an era of respectability,
easy success, and commercialism. His succeeding stories and novels
evolved from this theme, which, with his experiment in form, enabled the
American short story writers of the following decades to reach heights of
subtlety and psychological penetration.

The principal repository of Anderson’s manuscripts is the Newberry
Library in Chicago. Placed in the Library by the writer’s widow, Mrs.
Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson, this collection, numbering some 16,690
items, contains his extensive correspondence with publishers, editors,
artists, and notable writers of the twentieth century, among them
Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, H. L. Mencken, Theodore Dreiser, and
Thomas Wolfe (see item 753). In addition to Anderson’s numerous short
stories and articles, the collection contains the manuscripts of many
of his most important writings: _Winesburg, Ohio_, _Kit Brandon_, _Dark
laughter_, _Many marriages_, and _A new testament_. His diaries for the
period, 1936-1941, as well as scrapbooks of reviews and clippings, are
also included. It is this collection of papers which Anderson’s future
biographers and critics must consult and examine to fully assess his
note-worthy influence on and contribution to American fiction.

Arrangement of the bibliography falls quite naturally into two main
divisions: writings by Anderson, and writings about the man and his
works. In the first section a chronological, descriptive listing of
Anderson’s separately published works (together with citations for
significant reprints and translations) is followed by an enumeration of
books to which Anderson contributed and dramatizations of his writings.
Then follows an alphabetical title listing of Anderson’s contributions
to periodicals (Raymond Gozzi’s bibliography, item 593, was of value
in compiling this section), a list of periodicals and newspapers which
he edited, and a select list of his contributions to the _Smyth County
News_. Writings about Anderson are listed alphabetically by author or
other main entry in the second section, followed by a representative
selection of reviews of Anderson’s works. We have endeavored to make our
listings complete through 1959.

We are particularly grateful to Mrs. Eleanor Anderson for her interest
and advice, and for allowing us to reproduce a page of the manuscript of
_Winesburg, Ohio_ from the Newberry Library Collection. For permission
to use his photograph portrait of Anderson as a frontispiece, we are
indebted to Mr. Edward Steichen of the Museum of Modern Art. Mr. Ben
C. Bowman of the Newberry Library was especially helpful in answering
our numerous inquiries and in describing the contents of the Anderson
Collection; without his generous assistance many bibliographical
questions would have necessarily remained unanswered. Finally, we
acknowledge the invaluable co-operation of librarians throughout the
country in verifying citations and other points of information.

                                                          EUGENE P. SHEEHY
                                                          KENNETH A. LOHF

    COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES
    NEW YORK CITY, SEPTEMBER 1960




_PART I_

_WORKS BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON_


_Individual Works_


_WINDY McPHERSON’S SON. 1916_

1. WINDY | McPHERSON’S | SON | [panel line] | BY | SHERWOOD ANDERSON |
[double panel line] | NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY | LONDON: JOHN LANE,
THE BODLEY HEAD | MCMXVI [title surrounded by a triple line border]

    [1]-347p. 20½ × 13½ cm. Orange cloth stamped in gold on spine
    and gold and green on cover. One page of advertisements appears
    on the verso of p.347.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[4]): Press of J. J. Little & Ives
    Company, New York.

    _Dedication_ (p.[5]): To the living men and women of my own
    Middle Western home town this book is dedicated.

2. First English edition:

    London, John Lane, 1916. 347p.

3. Reprints:

    New York, B. W. Huebsch, 1922. 349p. Revised edition with a new
    concluding chapter.

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1923. 349p.


_MARCHING MEN. 1917_

4. MARCHING | MEN | [panel line] | BY | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | AUTHOR OF
“WINDY McPHERSON’S SON” | [double panel line] | NEW YORK: JOHN LANE
COMPANY | LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD | TORONTO: S. B. Gundy ⁂ ⁂
MCMXVII [title surrounded by a triple line border]

    314p. 19½ × 13 cm. Red cloth stamped in gold on cover and spine.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p[4]): Press of J. J. Little & Ives
    Company, New York.

    _Dedication_ (p.[5]): To American workingmen.

5. Reprint:

    New York, B. W. Huebsch, 1921. 264p.

6. Translation:

    _V nogu!_ Leningrad, Mysl, 1927. 232p. Tr., Mark Volosov.
    Foreword, V. Lavretski.


_MID-AMERICAN CHANTS. 1918_

7. MID-AMERICAN | CHANTS | BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON | AUTHOR OF “MARCHING
MEN,” “WINDY McPHERSON’S SON,” ETC. | NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY |
LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD | MCMXVIII

    82p. 21½ × 14 cm. Yellow cloth stamped in gold on cover and
    spine; green panel on cover.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[4]): Press of J. J. Little & Ives
    Company, New York.

    _Dedication_ (p.[5]): To Marion Margaret Anderson.

    A Foreword by Anderson, dated February 1918, appears on p.7-8.

    Contents: The cornfields; Chicago; Song of industrial America;
    Song of Cedric the Silent; Song of the break of day; Song of
    the beginning of courage; Revolt; A lullaby; Song of Theodore;
    Manhattan; Spring song; Industrialism; Salvo; The planting;
    Song of the middle world; The stranger; Song of the love of
    women; Song of Stephen the Westerner; Song to the lost ones;
    Forgotten song; American spring song; The beam; Song to new
    song; Song for dark nights; The lover; Night whispers; Song
    to the sap; Rhythms; Unborn; Night; A visit; Chant to dawn
    in a factory town; Song of the mating time; Song for lonely
    roads; Song long after; Song of the soul of Chicago; Song of
    the drunken business man; Song to the laugh; Hosanna; War;
    Mid-American prayer; We enter in; Dirge of war; Little song to
    a Western statesman; Song of the bug; Assurance; Reminiscent
    song; Evening song; Song of the singer.

8. Reprint:

    New York, B. W. Huebsch, 1921. 82p.


_WINESBURG, OHIO. 1919_

9. WINESBURG, OHIO | A GROUP OF TALES OF | OHIO SMALL TOWN LIFE | [panel
line] | BY | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | [publishers’ device with panel line
above and below] | NEW YORK | B. W. Huebsch | MCMXIX [title surrounded by
single line border]

    [x] 303p. 19 × 13 cm. Orange cloth with white paper label
    on spine and publishers’ device blind-stamped on cover. Top
    edge stained orange yellow. Map of Winesburg, Ohio, by Harald
    Toksvig appears on paste-down endpaper. In the first printing,
    p.86, line 5, reads: “an intense silence seemed to lay over
    everything.” Later printings changed “lay” to “lie.” On p.251,
    line 3, the type in the word “the” is broken. For further
    identification of the first and later printings, see item 713.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To the memory of my mother Emma Smith
    Anderson.

    Contents: The book of the grotesque; Hands; Paper pills;
    Mother; The philosopher; Nobody knows; Godliness (Parts I and
    II); Surrender (Part III); Terror (Part IV); A man of ideas;
    Adventure; Respectability; The thinker; Tandy; The strength of
    God; The teacher; Loneliness; An awakening; “Queer”; The untold
    lie; Drink; Death; Sophistication; Departure.

10. First English edition:

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1922. 303p.

[Illustration: Title page from the first issue of _Winesburg, Ohio_.

Item 9]

11. Reprints:

    New York, Modern Library [1919] xv, 303p. Introduction, Ernest
    Boyd.

    Girard, Kansas, Haldeman-Julius company [1925] 63p. (Little
    Blue Book, no. 865) A selection entitled _Hands, and
    other stories_. Contents: Hands; Paper pills; Mother; The
    philosopher; Nobody knows; A man of ideas; Adventure.

    Harmondsworth, England, Penguin Books, 1948. 224p.

    New York, New American Library [1956] 159p. (Signet Books 1304)

    New York, Viking Press [1958] 303p. (Compass Books Edition. C39)

12. Translations:

    _An Tê Shên Hsüan Chi._ Taepei, Hsinlu Book Company, 1958. 147p.

    _Mestečko v Ohiu._ Prague, SNKLHU, 1958. 212p. Tr. Eva
    Kondrysová.

    _Winesburg, Ohio. En amerikansk Provinsbys Menneskeskaebner._
    Copenhagen, Funkis Förlag, 1934. 264p. Tr., Elias Bredsdorff.

    _En by i Ohio._ Copenhagen. Reitzel, 1959. 144p. Tr., Henrik
    Larsen.

    _Pikkukaupunki._ Helsinki, Werner Söderström, 1955. 204p. Tr.,
    Leena-Maija Reunanen.

    _Winesburg-en-Ohio._ Paris, Gallimard, 1927. 253p. Tr.,
    Marguerite Gay.

    _Winesburg, Ohio._ Berlin and Frankfurt, Suhrkamp, 1958. 193p.
    Tr., Hans Erich Nossack.

    _Solitudine: Winesburg, Ohio._ Turin, Slavia, 1931. 304p. Tr.,
    Ada Prospero.

    _Piccola città nell’ Ohio._ Rome, Polin [194-] 221p. Tr.,
    Orsola Nemi.

    _Racconti dell’ Ohio._ Turin, Einaudi, 1950. 263p. Tr.,
    Giuseppe Trevisani.

    _Miasteczko Winesburg. Obrazki z zycia w stanie Ohio._ Warsaw,
    Czytelnik, 1958. 280p. Tr., Jerzy Krzyszton.

    _A secreta mentira._ Pôrto Alegre, Globo, 1950. xvi, 258p. Tr.,
    James Amado and Moacir Werneck de Castro.

    _A cidade dos estranhos._ Lisbon, Livros do Brasil, 1951. 232p.
    Tr., James Amado and Moacir Werneck de Castro.

    _O livro dos grotescos._ Rio de Janeiro, Revista Branca, 1952.
    248p. Tr., Constantino Paleólogo.

    _Uinsberg Okhaio._ Moscow, Gosudarstvennoye Izdatelstvo, 1924.
    224p. Tr., S. D. Matveyev.

    _Uainsburg, Ogaio._ Moscow and Leningrad, L. D. Frenkel, 1924.
    248p. Tr., P. Okhrimenko. Foreword, M. Levidov.

    _Uainsburg, Ogaio._ Moscow and Leningrad, Zemlya i Fabrika,
    1925. 360p. Tr., P. Okhrimenko.

    _Winesburgo, Ohio._ Madrid, Zeus, 1932. 263p. Tr., Armando Ros.
    Preface, Ernest Boyd.

    _Las novelas de lo grotesco._ Buenos Aires, S. Rueda [1942] iv,
    303p. Tr., Armando Ros. Preface, Max Dickman.

    _Winesburgo, Ohio. La novela de lo grotesco._ Madrid, Aguilar,
    1949. Tr., Armando Ros. Preface Germán Gómez de la Mata.

    _Den lilla staden._ Stockholm, C. E. Fritze, 1951. 297p. Tr.,
    Olov Jonason.

    _Varošica Vajnsberg u državi Ohajo_, Belgrade Novo Pokolenje,
    1954. 307p. Tr., Slobodan A. Jovanović.


_POOR WHITE. 1920_

    13. POOR WHITE | A NOVEL BY | SHERWOOD | ANDERSON | AUTHOR
    OF | WINESBURG, OHIO | [publishers’ device] | NEW YORK B. W.
    HUEBSCH, Inc. MCMXX [title surrounded by a single line border]

    [vi] 371p. 19½ × 13 cm. Blue cloth stamped in yellow on spine
    and publishers’ device blind-stamped on cover. Some copies top
    edge stained blue.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Tennessee Mitchell Anderson.

14. First English edition:

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1921. 315p.

15. Reprint:

    New York, Modern Library [1926] viii, 371p. With an
    introduction by Anderson.

16. Translations:

    _Arme blanke._ The Hague, H. P. Leopold, 1928. 284p. Tr., H. J.
    Smeding.

    _Der arme Weise._ Leipzig, Insel-Verlag, 1925. 299p. Tr., Karl
    Lerbs.

    _I istoria tou Hugh MacVay._ Athens, Atlantis, 1958. 240p. Tr.,
    B. Kalantzi.

    _A nagy ember._ Budapest, Révai, 1934. 279p. Tr., Lili
    Doberhoff.

    _Un povero bianco._ Verona, Mondadori, 1959. 305p. Tr.,
    Luisella Quilico.

    _Pobre blanco._ Barcelona, Gráfica Moderna, 1929. 258p. Tr.,
    Julio Calvo Alfaro. Preface, Angel Flores.

    _Mannen från västern._ Stockholm, Tiden, 1928. 340p. Tr., Stina
    Dahlberg.


_THE TRIUMPH OF THE EGG. 1921_

17. THE TRIUMPH OF THE EGG | A BOOK OF IMPRESSIONS | FROM AMERICAN
LIFE | IN TALES AND POEMS | BY | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | IN CLAY BY |
TENNESSEE MITCHELL | [publishers’ device] | (quotation, six lines, from
“Mid-American Chants”) | PHOTOGRAPHS BY EUGENE HUTCHINSON | NEW YORK B.
W. HUEBSCH, INC. MCMXXI

    [xii] 269p. 20½ × 14 cm. Dark green cloth lettered in yellow on
    spine and cover; design blind-stamped on cover. First issue has
    top edge stained yellow.

    “Impressions in clay by Tennessee Mitchell” appears on eight
    unnumbered leaves following p.[viii]

    A poem, beginning “Tales are people who sit on the doorstep,”
    appears on p.[i], the page preceding the half-title.

    _Dedication_ (p.[vii]): To Robert and John Anderson.

    Contents: The dumb man; I want to know why; Seeds; The other
    woman; The egg; Unlighted lamps; Senility; The man in the
    brown coat; Brothers; The door of the trap; The New Englander;
    War; Motherhood; Out of nowhere into nothing; The man with the
    trumpet.

18. First English edition:

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1922. xi, 269p.

19. Reprint:

    Tokyo, Kairyudo [1958?] 2 volumes: 147, 167p. Edited and
    annotated by Kichinosuke Ohashi. (Kairyudo’s Mentor Library,
    no. 10)

20. Translations:

    _Un païen de l’Ohio._ Nouvelles tirées de _The triumph of the
    egg_ et de _Horses and men_. Paris, Rieder, 1927. 218p. Tr.,
    Marguerite Gay. Preface, Eugène Jolas.

    _Das Ei triumphiert; Novellen._ Leipzig, Insel-Verlag, 1926.
    263p. Tr., Karl Lerbs.

    _Aus dem Nirgends ins Nichts._ Leipzig, Insel-Verlag [1927]
    77p. Tr., Karl Lerbs. A translation of the story “Out of
    nowhere into nothing.”

    _I racconti son uomini._ Rome, Editrice Cultura Moderna [1945]
    160p. Tr., Guglielmo Santangelo. A selected edition of five
    stories.

    _Onna ni natta otoka; Tamago._ Tokyo, Eihô-sha, 1956. 194p.
    Tr., Rikuo Taniguchi and Yoshizô Miyazaki. A translation of the
    story “The egg.”

    _Torzhestvo yaitsa._ Moscow, Sovremennyie Problemy, 1925. 257p.
    Tr., P. Okhrimenko.

    _Yaitso._ Moscow, Biblioteka Zhurnala “Ogonyok”, 1926. 63p.
    Tr., P. Okhrimenko. A translation of the story “The egg.”


_HORSES AND MEN. 1923_

21. HORSES AND MEN | Tales, long and short, from | our American life | BY
| SHERWOOD ANDERSON | [publishers’ device] | NEW YORK | B. W. HUEBSCH,
INC. | MCMXXIII

    [xiv] 347p. 19½ × 13 cm. Orange cloth with white paper label on
    spine and publishers’ device blind-stamped on cover. Top edge
    stained orange.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Theodore Dreiser.

    Contents: Foreword; Dreiser; I’m a fool; The triumph of a
    modern; “Unused”; A Chicago Hamlet; The man who became a woman;
    Milk bottles; The sad horn blowers; The man’s story; An Ohio
    pagan.

22. First English edition:

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1924. xiii, 347p.

23. Reprints:

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1927. 221p. (Travellers’ Library)

    New York, Peter Smith, 1933. 222p. (Travellers’ Library)

24. Translations:

    _L’Homme qui devint femme._ Trois nouvelles tirées de _Horses
    and men_. Paris, Émile-Paul, 1926. 190p. Tr., Bernard Fay and
    Jean Rivière. Preface, Bernard Fay.

    _Un païen de l’ Ohio._ Nouvelles tirées de _The Triumph of the
    egg_ et de _Horses and men_. Paris, Rieder, 1927. 218p. Tr.,
    Marguerite Gay. Preface, Eugène Jolas.

    _L’Uomo che diventò donna._ Milan, Longanesi, 1949. 314p. Tr.,
    G. Baldini.

    _Onna ni natta otoko; Tamago._ Tokyo, Eihô-sha, 1956. 194p.
    Tr., Rikuo Taniguchi and Yoshizô Miyazaki. A translation of the
    story “The man who became a woman.”

    _Koni i lyudi._ Leningrad and Moscow, Petrograd, 1926. 249p.
    Tr., M. Volosov.

    _Loshadi i lyudi._ Moscow and Leningrad, Gosudarstvennoye
    Izdatelstvo, 1927. 250p. Tr., M. Kovalenskaya.


_MANY MARRIAGES. 1923_

25. SHERWOOD ANDERSON | [single line] | MANY MARRIAGES | [publishers’
device] | NEW YORK B. W. HUEBSCH, INC. MCMXXIII [title surrounded by a
single line border]

    [x] 264p. 19½ × 13 cm. Blue cloth stamped in orange on cover
    and spine. Top edge stained orange.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Paul Rosenfeld.

    A Foreword and an Explanation by Anderson appear on
    p.[vii-viii] and p.[ix], respectively.

26. Reprint:

    New York, Grosset & Dunlap, 1929. 264p.

27. Translations:

    _Mange Aegteskaber._ Copenhagen, Gyldendal, 1946. 218p. Tr.,
    Ole Sarvig.

    _Molti matrimoni; romanzo._ Milan, Mondadori, 1945. 267p. Tr.,
    Luigi Giovanola. Reprinted: 1958.


_AN EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS BY ALFRED H. MAURER. 1924_

28. AN EXHIBITION OF | PAINTINGS | BY | ALFRED H. MAURER | BEGINNING |
JANUARY FIFTEENTH | -1924- | E. WEYHE | 794 LEXINGTON AVENUE | (Bet. 61st
and 62nd Sts.) | NEW YORK

    Single folded leaf, [4]p. 14 × 9 cm.

    Anderson’s essay on Alfred H. Maurer is untitled and appears on
    p.[2-3]

    Copy in the New York Public Library.


_A STORY TELLER’S STORY. 1924_

29. A Story Teller’s Story | The tale of an American writer’s journey |
through his own imaginative world and | through the world of facts, with
many of | his experiences and impressions among other | writers—told
in many notes—in four books | —and an Epilogue. | Sherwood Anderson
| [publishers’ device] | New York B. W. Huebsch, Inc. Mcmxxiv [title
surrounded by a double line border]

    [vi] 442p. 21 × 14 cm. Brown cloth stamped in yellow on cover
    and spine.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Alfred Stieglitz.

30. First English edition:

    London, Jonathan Cape, 1925. 442p.

31. Reprints:

    Garden City, New York, Garden City Publishing Company [1928]
    442p.

    New York, Grove Press [1958] 442p. (Evergreen Books, E-109)

32. Translations:

    _Un conteur se raconte._ In two volumes: I. _Mon père et moi_;
    II. _Je suis un homme._ Paris, Editions Kra, 1928-1929. 209,
    151p. Tr., Victor Llona. (Collection européenne)

    _Der Erzähler erzählt sein Leben._ Leipzig, Insel-Verlag,
    1927. 438p. Tr., Karl Lerbs.

    _Storia di me e dei miei racconti._ Turin, Einaudi, 1947. xix,
    338p. Tr., Fernanda Pivano.

    _Istoriya rasskazchika._ Moscow, Gos. izd-vo khudozh. lit-ry,
    1935. 318p. Tr., E. Romanova. Introduction, S. Dinamov.

    _Rasskazy._ Leningrad, Gos. izd-vo khudozh. lit-ry, 1959. 506p.
    Tr., D. M. Gorfinkel.

    _Sherwood Anderson y yo._ Buenos Aires, Santiago Rueda, 1943.
    385p. Tr., Luis Echávarri.


_DARK LAUGHTER. 1925_

33. [Type ornament rule] | DARK | LAUGHTER | [single line] | SHERWOOD
ANDERSON | [single line and publishers’ device] | NEW YORK MCMXXV | BONI
& LIVERIGHT | [type ornament rule] [title printed in black and blue]

    319p. 19½ × 13½ cm. Black cloth stamped in yellow on cover
    and spine. Decorated endpapers. Also 350 numbered and signed
    copies, and 20 lettered and signed copies.

    _Dedication_ (p.[5]): Dedicated to Jane W. Prall.

34. First English edition:

    London, Jarrolds, 1926. 288p.

35. Reprints:

    Leipzig, Tauchnitz, 1926. 263p. (Collection of British and
    American Authors, vol. 4756)

    New York, Grosset & Dunlap, 1927. 319p.

    Cleveland, World Publishing Company, 1942. 319p.

36. Translations:

    _Mørk latter._ Copenhagen, Gyldendal, 1945. 222p. Tr., Per
    Lange.

    _Riso nero._ Turin, Frassinelli, 1932. vi, 253p. Tr., Cesare
    Pavese.

    _Yoru no aibiki._ Tokyo, Kadokawa shoten, 1953. 309p. Tr.,
    Yoshihide Iijima.

    _Mørk latter._ Oslo, Jorgensensboktr., 1929. 267p. Tr., Hans
    Heiberg.

    _Mørk latter._ Oslo, Reistad. 1940. 221p. Tr., Hans Heiberg.

    _La risa negra._ Madrid, Zeus, 1931. 244p. Tr., Augusto Centeno.

    _La risa negra._ Buenos Aires, Futuro, 1944. 244p. Tr., Augusto
    Centeno.

    _Mörkt skratt._ Stockholm, Bonnier, 1928. 286p. Tr., Elsa af
    Trolle. Preface, Anders Osterling.


_THE MODERN WRITER. 1925_

37. THE MODERN | WRITER | BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON | [woodcut in red] | SAN
FRANCISCO MCMXXV | THE LANTERN PRESS | GELBER, LILIENTHAL, INC.

    [iv] 44p. 21½ × 14 cm. Black paper over boards stamped in gold
    on cover.

    _Colophon_ (p.[45]): One thousand copies of this book have
    been printed for The Lantern Press, San Francisco, (Gelber,
    Lilienthal, Inc.) by Edwin & Robert Grabhorn. Nine hundred &
    fifty copies are on B. R. Book Paper, numbered from 51 to 1000,
    and fifty on Japan Vellum, numbered from 1 to 50.


_SHERWOOD ANDERSON’S NOTEBOOK. 1926_

38. Sherwood | Anderson’s | NOTEBOOK | [panel line] | Containing Articles
Written During | the Author’s Life as a Story Teller, | and Notes of
his Impressions from | Life [vignette] scattered through the Book |
[publishers’ device and panel line] | NEW YORK MCMXXVI | BONI & LIVERIGHT
[title surrounded by a triple line border of which the outer line is a
decorated rule]

    230p. 21½ × 14½ cm. Blue decorated paper over boards; purple
    cloth spine stamped in gold. Also 225 large paper copies
    numbered and signed.

    _Dedication_ (p.[7]): Dedicated to two friends, M. D. F. and
    Emerson.

    Contents: From Chicago; Four American impressions (Gertrude
    Stein, Paul Rosenfeld, Ring Lardner, Sinclair Lewis); Notes out
    of a man’s life (Notes 1-5); A note on realism; After seeing
    George Bellows’ Mr. and Mrs. Wase; I’ll say we’ve done well; A
    meeting South; Notes out of a man’s life (Notes 6-10); Notes on
    standardization; Alfred Stieglitz; Notes out of a man’s life
    (Notes 11-16); When the writer talks; Notes out of a man’s life
    (Notes 17-22); An apology for crudity; King Coal; Notes out of
    a man’s life (Notes 23-29).


_TAR: A MIDWEST CHILDHOOD. 1926_

39. TAR | A | Midwest Childhood | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | [publishers’
device] | NEW YORK | BONI AND LIVERIGHT | 1926 [first three lines
enclosed within a blue decorated border; title surrounded by a single
line border]

    xviii, 346p. 21½ × 14½ cm. Brown cloth stamped in gold and blue
    on cover and spine. Also 350 large paper copies numbered and
    signed.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Elizabeth Anderson.

    A Foreword by Anderson appears on p.ix-xviii.

40. First English edition:

    London, Martin Secker, 1927. xviii, 346p.

41. Reprint:

    New York, Boni and Liveright, 1931. xviii, 346p.

42. Translations:

    _Tar._ Paris, Stock, Delamain et Boutelleau, 1931. 231p. Tr.,
    Marguerite Gay and Paul Genty. Preface, René Lalou.

    _Tar._ Budapest, Athenæum, 1934. 275p. Tr., Andor Gál.

    _Tar._ Barcelona, José Janés, 1948. 295p. Tr., Mario G.
    Alcántara.


_A NEW TESTAMENT. 1927_

43. A New | Testament | [panel line] | Sherwood Anderson [panel line] |
BONI AND LIVERIGHT | New York mcmxxvii [title, printed in black and red,
is surrounded by a double line border]

    118p. 18 × 11 cm. Blue cloth stamped in gold and red on cover
    and spine. Also 265 large paper copies numbered and signed.

    _Dedication_ (p.[7]): Dedicated to Horace Liveright.

    Contents: A young man; One who looked up at the sky;
    Testament—four songs; The man with the trumpet; Hunger; Death;
    The healer; Man speaking to a woman; A dreamer; Man walking
    alone; Testament of an old man; Half gods; Ambition; In a
    workingman’s rooming house; A man standing by a bridge; The
    red-throated black; Singing swamp negro; Thoughts of a man
    passed in a lonely street at night; Cities; A youth speaking
    slowly; One who sought knowledge; The minister of God; A
    persistent lover; The visit in the morning—; The dumb man; A
    poet; A man resting from labor; A stoic lover; A young Jew; The
    story teller; A thinker; The man in the brown coat; One puzzled
    concerning himself; The dreamer; A vagrant; Young man in a
    room; Negro on the docks at Mobile, Ala.; Word factories; Man
    lying on a couch; The ripper; One who would not grow old; The
    New Englander; The builder; Young man filled with the feeling
    of power; A dying poet; Brother; The lame one; Two glad men;
    Answering voice of a second glad man; Chicago; Challenge of the
    sea; Poet; At the well; An emotion; Der Tag; Another poet; A
    man and two women standing by a wall facing the sea.


_ALICE AND THE LOST NOVEL. 1929_

44. ALICE AND THE LOST NOVEL | by | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | being Number
Ten of | The Woburn Books | [publishers’ device] | Published at London
in 1929 by | ELKIN MATHEWS & MARROT [title surrounded by a double line
border]

    [1]-[28]p. 20½ × 15 cm. Light blue paper over boards colored in
    dark blue on covers. Pages uncut. Signed by the author on p.[2]

    _Colophon_ (p.[2]): Five hundred and thirty numbered copies
    of this story have been set in Monotype Eleven Point Plantin,
    and printed by Robert MacLehose & Co. Ltd., at the University
    Press, Glasgow; Nos. 1-500 only are for sale and Nos. 501-530
    for presentation.


_HELLO TOWNS! 1929_

45. HELLO TOWNS! | [decorated line] | by | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | [single
line] | [decorated line] | 19 [publishers’ device] 29 | [decorated line]
| New York · Horace Liveright [title, single line, and publishers’ device
in red]

    [1]-339p. 21½ × 14½ cm. Brown cloth stamped in orange on spine
    and blind-stamped on cover. Top edge stained orange. In first
    printing, page 35, line 30, “fingers” is misspelled.

    _Dedication_ (p.[5]): To my friends, Mr. and Mrs. Burton Emmett.

    _Frontispiece_: “Map of Smyth County, Virginia” by Tom Ewald.

46. Translation:

    _Hello town!_ Munich, Langewiesche-Brandt, 1956. 121p. Tr.,
    Maria von Schweinitz.


_NEARER THE GRASS ROOTS. 1929_

47. NEARER THE | GRASS ROOTS | BY SHERWOOD ANDERSON | and by the same
author, an account of | a journey [vignette in red] ELIZABETHTON |
[woodcut] | San Francisco: The Westgate Press: 1929 | [single line]

    [iv] 35p. 23 × 15 cm. Decorated green paper over boards; black
    cloth spine stamped in gold. Autographed by the author on the
    half-title page.

    _Colophon_: An edition of five hundred copies. Typography by
    The Grabhorn Press. Wood-cuts by John Ira Gannon. Each copy
    signed by the author.


_THE AMERICAN COUNTY FAIR. 1930_

48. THE | AMERICAN | COUNTY | FAIR | by | Sherwood Anderson | [woodcut] |
RANDOM HOUSE, NEW YORK | 1930

    [ii] 13p. 21 × 14 cm. Stiff green paper covers with label on
    spine.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[2]): 875 copies for Random House,
    PJ [Paul Johnston], printed in the U. S. A. by the Southworth
    Press.

    One of six “Prose Quartos” issued by Random House; title of the
    series from slip case containing the six pamphlets.


_PERHAPS WOMEN. 1931_

49. PERHAPS WOMEN | By | Sherwood Anderson | [publishers’ device] |
HORACE LIVERIGHT, INC. | NEW YORK [title surrounded by a double line
border and printed on a yellow background]

    [1]-[144]p. 19½ × 14 cm. Blue cloth stamped in gold on cover
    and spine. Top edge stained yellow.

    _Frontispiece_: Woodcut by Julius J. Lankes.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[4]): Copyright, 1931.

    _Dedication_ (p.[5]): To Maurice Long.

    An Introduction by Anderson, dated April 1931, appears on p.[7]

    Contents: Machine song; Lift up thine eyes; Loom dance; It is
    a woman’s age; Perhaps women; Night in a mill town; Ghosts;
    Entering the mill at night; Perhaps women; Will America have to
    turn to women?; Perhaps women; The cry in the night.


_BEYOND DESIRE. 1932_

50. SHERWOOD | ANDERSON | [single line] | BEYOND | DESIRE | [single line]
| [publishers’ device] | LIVERIGHT · INC. | NEW YORK [title surrounded by
a red single line border]

    [viii] 359p. Tan cloth stamped in red and black on cover and
    spine. Red endpapers. Top edge stained red. Also limited signed
    edition.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[iv]): Manufactured ... at the Van
    Rees Press.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Elenore.

51. Translations:

    _Hinsides alt Begaer._ Copenhagen, J. H. Schultz, 1937. 376p.
    Tr., Ole Restrup.

    _Po tu storonu zhelaniya._ Moscow and Leningrad, Gos. izd-vo
    khudozh. lit-ry, 1933. 320p. Tr., P. Okhrimenko. Introduction,
    S. Dinamov.

    _Más allá del deseo._ Buenos Aires, Editorial Sud-americana
    [1945] 458p. Tr., Manuel Barberá.


_DEATH IN THE WOODS. 1933_

52. DEATH IN THE | WOODS | AND OTHER STORIES | [ornament] | SHERWOOD |
ANDERSON | [publishers’ device] | LIVERIGHT · INC · PUBLISHERS | NEW YORK
[title surrounded by a triple line border of which the inner line is a
broken line]

    [viii] 298p. 21 × 14½ cm. Orange cloth stamped in black and
    gold on spine.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[iv]): Copyright, 1933.
    Manufactured ... at the Van Rees Press.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To my friend Ferdinand Schevill.

    Contents: Death in the woods; The return; There she is—she
    is taking her bath; The lost novel; The fight; Like a queen;
    That sophistication; In a strange town; These mountaineers;
    A sentimental journey; A jury case; Another wife; A meeting
    South; The flood; Why they got married; Brother Death.


_NO SWANK. 1934_

53. NO SWANK | [single line] | Sherwood Anderson | [single line] |
[publishers’ device] | The Centaur Press | Philadelphia | 1934

    [x] 130p. 19½ × 13 cm. Black cloth stamped in gold on spine.
    One thousand unnumbered copies of which 50 were signed by the
    author.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[iv]): Printed and bound ... by The
    Haddon Craftsmen, Inc.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Laura Lou Copenhaver in appreciation.

    Contents: Meeting Ring Lardner; Death on a winter day; The
    Dreiser; Prize fighters and authors; Mr. J. J. Lankes and his
    woodcuts; Two Irishmen; To George Borrow; A Stonewall Jackson
    man; Lincoln Steffens talks of Russia; No swank; Visit to a
    painter; Gertrude Stein; A man’s mind; Lawrence again; Margaret
    Anderson: real—unreal; Paul; To Jasper Deeter: a letter.


_PUZZLED AMERICA. 1935_

54. Puzzled America | [single line] | By | Sherwood Anderson |
[decoration] | [single line] | Charles Scribner’s Sons | New York MCMXXV
London

    xvi, 287p. 21 × 14½ cm. Blue cloth stamped in gold on spine and
    cover. First printing has code letter _A_ on copyright page.

    _Dedication_ (p.[v]): To Roger Sergel.

    Contents: Introduction; At the mine mouth; The price of
    aristocracy; People; Tough babes in the woods; Blue smoke;
    “I want to work”; A union meeting; New tyrants of the land;
    Elizabethton, Tennessee; “Please let me explain”; The
    nationalist; They elected him; Revolt in South Dakota; Village
    wassail; Night in a corn town; Olsonville; The return of the
    princess.


_KIT BRANDON. 1936_

55. KIT BRANDON | A PORTRAIT | [type ornament rule] | BY | SHERWOOD |
ANDERSON | 1936 | [type ornament rule] | CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS · NEW
YORK | CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS · LTD · LONDON

    [x] 373p. 19½ × 13½ cm. Black cloth stamped in white on spine
    and cover. Top edge stained blue. First printing has code
    letter _A_ on copyright page.

    _Dedication_ (p.[vii]): To Mary Pratt Emmett.

56. First English edition:

    London, Hutchinson, 1937. 346p.

57. Reprint:

    London, Hutchinson, 1938. 346p. (Cheap edition)

58. Translations:

    _Kit Brandon._ Copenhagen, Hasselbalch, 1937. 366p. Tr., Arne
    Stevns.

    _Kit Brandon._ Amsterdam, Wereldbibliotheek, 1947. 312p. Tr.,
    Waldie van Eck.

    _Ritratto di Kit Brandon. Romanzo._ Milan, G. Feltrinelli,
    1959. 381p. Tr., Marcella Bonsanti.


_PLAYS, WINESBURG AND OTHERS. 1937_

59. PLAYS | Winesburg | and Others | By | SHERWOOD | ANDERSON | CHARLES
SCRIBNER’S SONS | New York | CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, LTD. | London |
[panel line] | 1937 [title enclosed by four crossed lines and surrounded
by a double line border]

    xxii, 242p. Brown cloth stamped in blue on spine.

    Contents: An explanation; Note; Jasper Deeter: a dedication;
    Winesburg, Ohio; The triumph of the egg; Mother; They married
    later.


_A WRITER’S CONCEPTION OF REALISM. 1939_

60. SHERWOOD | ANDERSON | [single line] | A | WRITER’S | CONCEPTION | OF
REALISM | AN ADDRESS DELIVERED | ON JANUARY 20, 1939 AT | OLIVET COLLEGE
| [single line] | PUBLISHED AT OLIVET COLLEGE | OLIVET, MICHIGAN, MCMXXXIX

    20p. 15 × 8½ cm. Wrappers.

    _On verso of cover_ (p.2): Copyright 1939, by Sherwood Anderson.


_HOME TOWN. 1940_

61. THE FACE OF AMERICA | EDWIN ROSSKAM, EDITOR | [single line] |
HOME TOWN | BY | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | PHOTOGRAPHS BY FARM SECURITY
PHOTOGRAPHERS | [single line] | [publishers’ device] | ALLIANCE BOOK
CORPORATION | NEW YORK

    [iv] 145p. 26 × 17½ cm. Gray cloth stamped in green on cover
    and spine.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[iv]): Copyright 1940 by Sherwood
    Anderson.


_SHERWOOD ANDERSON’S MEMOIRS. 1942_

62. Sherwood | Anderson’s | Memoirs | New York | HARCOURT, BRACE AND
COMPANY [title surrounded by a single line border]

    [x] 507p. 22 × 14½ cm. Black cloth stamped in gold on spine and
    cover.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[iv]): Copyright, 1942 by Eleanor
    Anderson.

    Contents: This book; Book I. What a man’s made of: The age; The
    family; A small town street; Through the corn; Experiments;
    Discovery of a father; New worlds; Ohio pagans; Horses,
    bicycles and men; My sister Stella; Book II. American money:
    Chicago; We share; Money! Money!; The capture of Caratura; I
    court a rich girl; The golf ball; The Italian’s garden; The man
    of ideas; Brother Earl; Book III. A robin’s egg renaissance:
    The nest; Bayard Barton; In Jackson Park; We little children of
    the arts; Margy Currie; Ben and Burton; All will be free; The
    death of Mrs. Folger; A chance missed; The conquering male; The
    finding; Book IV. The literary life: Waiting for Ben Huebsch; I
    write too much of queer people; Be little; Old Mary, the dogs,
    and Theda Bara; Certain Meetings South; New York, the ’20’s;
    Dreiser’s party; Writing stories; Man with a book; Meeting
    Horace Liveright; I build a house; Book V. Into the Thirties: A
    dedication and an explanation; A man friend; Why I live where
    I live; The death of Lawrence; I become a protester; Backstage
    with a martyr; The feeders; The sound of the stream; Book VI.
    Life, not death—: The other one; Work fast, man; I went with
    Eleanor; Writers sweet and sour; Mexican night; Dinner in
    Thessaly; After a conference; The dance is on; One by one; God
    bless the Americas; The fortunate one.

63. Translation:

    _Intimidad de un novelista; memorias de Sherwood Anderson._
    Buenos Aires, Editorial Claridad [1947] 520p. Tr., Francisco
    Madrid. (Coleccion de viajes, memorias y aventuras. vol. 2)


_THE SHERWOOD ANDERSON READER. 1947_

64. THE | Sherwood | Anderson | READER | Edited, with an Introduction,
| by Paul Rosenfeld | [publishers’ device] HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY ·
BOSTON 1947 | [single line] | The Riverside Press Cambridge

    xxx, 850p. 21 × 14 cm. Light tan cloth stamped in red and green
    on spine and cover. Top edge stained red.

    Contents: Introduction; Nobody laughed; Blackfoot’s
    masterpiece; Paper pills; Hands; Tandy; The untold lie;
    Unlighted lamps; The New Englander; Chicago; Song of the soul
    of Chicago; Chicago again; The egg; I want to know why; The
    contract; The sad horn-blowers; The man with the trumpet; The
    lame one; The dumb man; Brothers; One throat; When we care;
    Song of Theodore; The book of the grotesque; Alfred Stieglitz;
    Foreword from _Horses and men_; The man’s story; Milk-bottles;
    A meeting South; The return; Meeting Ring Lardner; Brother
    death; A part of earth; The yellow gown; A writer’s conception
    of realism; We little children of the arts; The sound of the
    stream; Morning roll-call; I’m a fool; A sentimental journey;
    Justice; A dead dog; The death of Bill Graves; Daughters; An
    Ohio pagan; The man with a scar; River journey; Smyth County
    News (Editorials); Father Abraham; a Lincoln fragment; Machine
    song; Loom dance; Mill girls; The TVA; Tough babes in the
    woods; ‘Please let me explain’; Bud (As Kit saw him); Brown
    bomber; Dedication of the Memoirs; Introduction to the Memoirs;
    Discovery of a father; Girl by the stove; White spot; All
    will be free; I build a house; The American small town; The
    corn-planting; A walk in the moonlight; His chest of drawers;
    Not sixteen; Tim and General Grant.

    The following items included in this volume were previously
    unpublished: Nobody laughed; A part of earth; Morning
    roll-call; Daughters; Father Abraham: a Lincoln fragment; White
    spot; Tim and General Grant.

65. Translations:

    _Il meglio di Sherwood Anderson._ Milan, Longanesi, 1954.
    1048p. Tr., Marcella Hannau.

    _Ur ingenstans in i ingenting._ Stockholm, C. E. Fritze, 1952.
    287p. Tr., Olov Jonason. Preface, Artur Lundkvist.


_THE PORTABLE SHERWOOD ANDERSON. 1949_

66. The Portable | Sherwood Anderson | Edited, and with an introduction,
by | Horace Gregory | New York | The Viking Press | 1949

    vi, 631p. 17 × 11 cm. Brown cloth stamped in dark brown.

    Contents: Editor’s introduction; The chronology of Sherwood
    Anderson’s life and books; A selected bibliography on Sherwood
    Anderson. From _Winesburg, Ohio_: Hands; The philosopher;
    Godliness; The strength of God; The teacher; Loneliness;
    Departure. _Poor white._ Selected stories: The contract; The
    egg; I’m a fool; The man who became a woman; A meeting South;
    Death in the woods. Men and women: Four American impressions:
    Gertrude Stein, Paul Rosenfeld, Ring Lardner, Sinclair Lewis;
    Dreiser. Reportage and editorial: The American county fair; In
    Washington. A selection of letters: To Alfred Stieglitz, John
    Anderson, Burton Emmett, Ferdinand Schevill, Edmund Wilson,
    Dorothy Dudley, Burton and Mary Emmett, Theodore Dreiser, John
    L. Lewis, Henry Goddard Leach, Mary Blair, James Boyd, Paul
    Appel, Maxwell Perkins, Ettie Stettheimer, Gilbert Wilson, and
    Anita Loos.

67. Reprint:

    New York, Viking Press [1956] vi, 631p. (Viking Paperbound
    Portable, P42)


_LETTERS. 1953_

68. Letters of | SHERWOOD ANDERSON | SELECTED AND EDITED WITH AN |
INTRODUCTION AND NOTES BY | Howard Mumford Jones | IN ASSOCIATION WITH |
Walter B. Rideout | With Illustrations | [publishers’ device] | Little,
Brown and Company · Boston

    xxv, 479p. 22½ × 14½ cm. Black cloth stamped in gold on spine.

    _On verso of title-page_ (p.[iv]): Copyright 1953, by Eleanor
    Anderson.


_Essays and Stories_

69. City plowman. _In_ Frank, Waldo, and others, editors. _America and
Alfred Stieglitz._ Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, Doran, 1934. p.303-08.

70. Harry breaks through. _In_ Kreymborg, Alfred, and others, editors.
_The new caravan._ New York, W. W. Norton, 1936. p.84-89.

71. I want to be counted. _In_ National Committee for the Defense of
Political Prisoners. _Harlan miners speak._ New York, Harcourt, Brace
[1932] p.298-312. (“An address delivered before a meeting held by the
National Committee ... in New York City on December 6, 1931, to protest
the legal and illegal terror in the Harlan, Kentucky, coal fields”)

72. Man and his imagination. _In_ Centeno, Augusto, editor. _The intent
of the artist._ Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1941. p.39-79.

73. Ohio: I’ll say we’ve done well. _In_ Gruening, Ernest Henry, editor.
_These United States; a symposium._ First series. New York, Boni and
Liveright [1923] p.109-17.

74. There she is—she is taking her bath. _In_ Kreymborg, Alfred, and
others, editors. _The second American caravan._ New York, Macaulay, 1928.
p.100-11.


_Introductions and Forewords_

75. _Alfred Stieglitz presents 7 Americans; A catalogue of an exhibition
at the Anderson Galleries, New York, March 9-28, 1925._ [New York, 1925]
Introduction in form of a poem entitled “Seven alive,” p.3.

76. Crane, Stephen. _The works of Stephen Crane._ Volume XI: Midnight
sketches and other impressions. New York, Alfred A. Knopf [1926]
Introduction, dated September 1926, p.xi-xv.

77. Dreiser, Theodore. _Free and other stories._ New York, Modern Library
[1918] Introduction, p.v-x.

78. Jolas, Eugène. _Cinema._ New York, Adelphi Company, 1926.
Introduction, dated June 1, 1926, p.9-10.

79. McKee, Philip. _Big town._ New York, John Day [1931] Foreword, p.1-9.

80. Shaw, Lloyd. _Cowboy dances._ Caldwell, Idaho, Caxton Printers, 1939.
Foreword, in the form of a letter written from Marion, Virginia, p.5.
Revised edition, 1949.

81. Sklar, George and Albert Maltz. _Peace on earth._ New York and Los
Angeles, Samuel French; London, Samuel French, Ltd., 1934. Foreword,
p.v-vi.

82. Whitman, Walt. _Leaves of grass._ New York, Thomas Y. Crowell [1933]
Introduction, entitled “Walt Whitman,” p.v-vii.


_Letters_

83. Desperate need. _Nation_ 135:506 November 23, 1932. Letter to the
Editor concerning the Prisoners’ Relief Fund.

84. The herald angel sings. _New York Times_ December 10, 1933, section
10, p.4. Letter to the Drama Editor, dated December 4, 1933, regarding
the Theatre Union’s production of “Peace on earth.”

85. Letter [to V. F. Calverton] _Modern Quarterly_ 2:81 Fall 1924. In
reference to Calverton’s article on Anderson: see item 529.

86. Letters from Sherwood Anderson. In _Paul Rosenfeld, voyager in the
arts_, edited by Jerome Mellquist and Lucie Wiese. New York, Creative
Age, 1948. p.197-232.

87. The letters of Sherwood Anderson. _Atlantic Monthly_ 191:30-33 June
1953. Letters to Roy Jansen and George Freitag, edited by H. M. Jones.

88. Letters of Sherwood Anderson. _Berkeley_ no.1:1-4 [1947] Letters to
Robert Morss Lovett and Ferdinand Schevill.

89. Letters of Sherwood Anderson. _Harper’s Bazaar_ 73:130, 201-03
February 1949. Letters to John Anderson and Theodore Dreiser.

90. [Letters to Gertrude Stein] In _The flowers of friendship; letters
written to Gertrude Stein_, edited by Donald Gallup. New York, Alfred A.
Knopf, 1953. Includes eleven letters from Anderson.

91. Letters to Van Wyck Brooks. _Story_ 19:42-62 September-October 1941.


_Dramatizations_

92. _Above suspicion._ In _The Free Company presents; a collection of
plays about the meaning of America_. New York, The Free Company; New
York, Dodd, Mead, 1941. p.269-301. Reprinted as a pamphlet by the Free
Company in the same year.

93. _I’m a fool._ Dramatized by Christopher Sergel. Chicago, Dramatic
Publishing Company [1942] 34p.

94. Mother. A one-act play. _In_ Wilde, Percival, editor. _Contemporary
one-act plays from nine countries._ Boston, Little, Brown, 1936. p.43-58.

95. Textiles. A play for the radio. _In_ Kozlenko, William, editor.
_Contemporary one-act plays._ New York, Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1938.
p.1-22.

96. _The triumph of the egg._ A drama in one act; dramatized by Raymond
O’Neil. Chicago, Dramatic Publishing Company [1932] 25p.

97. _Winesburg, Ohio. A drama in three acts._ Dramatized by Christopher
Sergel. New York premiere, February 5, 1958. Unpublished.


_Contributions to Periodicals_

Reprintings in collections of Anderson’s work are indicated as follows:

    _ALN_   _Alice and The Lost Novel_
    _BD_    _Beyond Desire_
    _DW_    _Death in the Woods_
    _HM_    _Horses and Men_
    _HT_    _Hello Towns_
    _KB_    _Kit Brandon_
    _LSA_   _Letters of Sherwood Anderson_
    _MAC_   _Mid-American Chants_
    _NGR_   _Nearer the Grass Roots_
    _NS_    _No Swank_
    _NT_    _New Testament_
    _PA_    _Puzzled America_
    _PSA_   _Portable Sherwood Anderson_
    _PW_    _Perhaps Women_
    _PWO_   _Plays, Winesburg and Others_
    _SAM_   _Sherwood Anderson’s Memoirs_
    _SAN_   _Sherwood Anderson’s Notebook_
    _SAR_   _Sherwood Anderson Reader_
    _SS_    _Story Teller’s Story_
    _TE_    _Triumph of the Egg_
    _WO_    _Winesburg, Ohio_

98. Aching breasts and snow-white hearts; being some fan letters of Ezra
Bone of Elmore, Tennessee, to Gloria Swanson. _Vanity Fair_ 25:51, 108
January 1926.

99. Adventures in form and color. _Little Review_ 7:[64] January-March
1921.

100. Advertising a nation. _Agricultural Advertising_ 12:389 May 1905.

101. Alfred Stieglitz. _New Republic_ 32:215-17 October 25, 1922. _SAN_,
_SAR_.

102. America on a cultural jag. _Saturday Review of Literature_ 4:364-65
December 3, 1927.

103. American spectator. _American Spectator_ 2,no.16:1 February 1934.

104. Another wife. _Scribner’s Magazine_ 80:587-94 December 1926. _DW._

105. An apology for crudity. _Dial_ 63:437-38 November 8, 1917. _SAN._

106. At Amsterdam. _New Masses_ 8:11 November 1932.

107. At the mine mouth. _Today_ 1:5, 19-21 December 30, 1933. _PA_ (with
revisions).

108. An awakening. _Little Review_ 5:13-21 December 1918. _WO._

109. Backstage with a martyr. _Coronet_ 8:39-41 July 1940. _SAM._

110. Beauty. _Harper’s Bazaar_ 63:78-79, 118 January 1929. _ALN_
(entitled “Alice”), _DW_ (entitled “Like a queen”).

111. Betrayed. _Golden Book_ 1:743-44 May 1925. Concerns Nathaniel Wright
Stephenson’s biography of Lincoln.

112. Blackfoot’s masterpiece. _Forum_ 55:679-83 June 1916. _SAR._

113. Blue smoke. _Today_ 1:6-7, 23 February 24, 1934. _PA._

114. Boardwalk fireworks. _Today_ 5:6-7, 19 November 9, 1935.

115. Broken. _Century_ 105:643-56 March 1923. _HM_ (entitled “A Chicago
hamlet”).

116. Brothers. _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 53:110-15 April 1921. _TE_, _SAR_.

117. Brown boomer. _Signatures_ no.3:302-08 Winter 1937-1938. _SAR_ (with
corrected title, “Brown bomber”).

118. Burt Emmett. _Colophon_ n.s.1,no.1:7-9 Summer 1935.

119. A business man’s reading. _Reader_ 2:503-04 October 1903.

120. Business types: the boyish man. _Agricultural Advertising_ 11:53
October 1904.

121. Business types: the discouraged man. _Agricultural Advertising_
11:43-44 July 1904.

122. Business types: the good fellow. _Agricultural Advertising_ 11:36
January 1904.

123. Business types: the hot young ’un and the cold old ’un.
_Agricultural Advertising_ 11:24-26 September 1904.

124. Business types: the liar—a vacation story. _Agricultural
Advertising_ 11:27-29 June 1904.

125. Business types: the man of affairs. _Agricultural Advertising_
11:36-38 March 1904.

126. Business types: silent men. _Agricultural Advertising_ 11:19
February 1904.

127. Business types: the solicitor. _Agricultural Advertising_ 11:21-24
August 1904.

128. Business types: the traveling man. _Agricultural Advertising_
11:39-40 April 1904.

129. Business types: the undeveloped man. _Agricultural Advertising_
11:31-32 May 1904.

130. Carl Sandburg. _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 54:360-61 December 1921.

131. Caught. _American Mercury_ 1:165-76 February 1924. _SS_ (entitled
“Epilogue”).

132. Censorship. _Laughing Horse_ no.17:[5] February 1930.

133. Chicago—a feeling. _Vanity Fair_ 27:53, 118 October 1926.

134. City gangs enslave moonshine mountaineers. _Liberty_ 12:12-13
November 2, 1935.

135. Cityscapes. _American Spectator_ 2,no.16:2 February 1934.

136. Communications. _American Spectator_ 1,no.11:2 September 1933.

137. Confessions and letters: questionnaire. _Little Review_ 12:12-13 May
1929. Reprinted: _The Little Review Anthology_, p.354-55.

138. The contract. _Broom_ 1:148-53 December 1921. _SAR_, _PSA_.

139. The corn planting. _American Magazine_ 118:47, 149-50 November 1934;
_Penguin Parade_ 1:115-22 November 1937. _SAR._

140. Cotton mill. _Scribner’s Magazine_ 88:1-11 July 1930.

141. Country town notes. _Vanity Fair_ 32:63, 112, 126 May 1929.

142. The country weekly. _Forum_ 85:208-13 April 1931.

143. County squires. _Vanity Fair_ 33:63, 128 October 1929.

144. A criminal’s Christmas. _Vanity Fair_ 27:89, 130 December 1926. _HT._

145. The cry in the night. _Vanity Fair_ 37:49-50, 80 September 1931.

146. The dance is on. _Rotarian_ 58:7 June 1941. _SAM._

147. Danville, Virginia. _New Republic_ 65:266-68 January 21, 1931. _SAM_
(as part of chapter “I become a protester”).

148. A dead dog. _Yale Review_ 20:554-67 Spring 1931. _SAR._

149. Death in the woods. _American Mercury_ 9:7-13 September 1926. _DW_,
_PSA_. A French translation, “Mort dans les bois,” by Hélène Boussinesq
appeared in _Europe_ 15:5-22 September 15, 1927.

150. Delegation. _New Yorker_ 9:36, 38 December 9, 1933.

151. Discovery of a father. _Reader’s Digest_ 35:21-25 November 1939.
_SAM_, _SAR_.

152. Domestic and juvenile. _Vanity Fair_ 34:35-37 March 1930.

153. The door of the trap. _Dial_ 68:567-76 May 1920. _TE._

154. Dreiser. _Little Review_ 3:5 April 1916.

155. Educating an author. _Vanity Fair_ 28:47-48 May 1927.

156. Elizabethton, Tennessee. _Nation_ 128:526-27 May 1, 1929. _NGR_,
_PA_.

157. An estimate of “Mr. and Mrs. Philip Wase”. _Vanity Fair_ 25:57, 94
November 1925. _SAN_ (entitled “After seeing George Bellows’ Mr. and Mrs.
Wase”).

158. Explain! Explain! Again explain! _Today_ 1:3 December 2, 1933.

159. Factory town. _New Republic_ 62:143-44 March 26, 1930.

160. The far West. _Vanity Fair_ 27:39-40, 104 January 1927.

161. The farmer wears clothes. _Agricultural Advertising_ 9:6 February
1902.

162. Feud. _American Magazine_ 119:71, 112-14 February 1935.

163. The fight. _Vanity Fair_ 29:72, 106, 108 October 1927. _DW._

164. Five poems (A dreamer; Man walking alone; Half-gods; Ambition; A man
standing by a bridge). _American Mercury_ 11:26-27 May 1927. _NT._

165. For what? _Yale Review_ 30:750-58 June 1941. _SAM_ (entitled “We
little children of the arts”), _SAR_.

166. Four American impressions. _New Republic_ 32:171-73 October 11,
1922. Concerns Gertrude Stein, Ring Lardner, Paul Rosenfeld, and Sinclair
Lewis. _SAN._ The section on Rosenfeld is reprinted in _Paul Rosenfeld,
voyager in the arts_. New York, Creative Age press, 1948. p.233.

167. From Chicago. _Seven Arts_ 2:41-59 May 1917. (Part II is a reprint
of “The novelist”.) _MAC_, _SAN_.

168. From little things. _This Week_ February 11, 1940, p.2. _HT._

169. The fussy man and the trimmer. _Agricultural Advertising_ 11:79-82
December 1904.

170. Gertrude Stein. _American Spectator_ 2,no.18:3 April 1934. _NS._

171. Gertrude Stein’s kitchen. _Wings_ (Literary Guild of America)
7,no.9:12-13, 26 September 1933.

172. A ghost story. _Vanity Fair_ 29:78, 142 December 1927.

173. Girl by the stove. _Decision_ 1:19-22 January 1941. _SAM_, _SAR_.

174. Give a child room to grow. _Parents’ Magazine_ 11:17 April 1936.

175. Give Rex Tugwell a chance. _Today_ 4:5, 21 June 8, 1935.

176. The good life at Hedgerow. _Esquire_ 6:51, 198A, 198B, 199 October
1936. _PWO_ (entitled “Jasper Deeter”).

177. A good one. _New Republic_ 85:259 January 8, 1936. A review of Evan
Shipman’s _Free-for-all_.

178. A great factory. _Vanity Fair_ 27:51-52 November 1926.

179. Hands. _Masses_ 8:5, 7 March 1916. _WO_, _SAR_, _PSA_.

180. Hard-boiled. _Direction_ 1,no.4:8-9 April 1938.

181. Hello, big boy. _Vanity Fair_ 26:41-42, 88 July 1926. _HT_ (entitled
“Hello towns”).

182. Hello Yank. _Saturday Review_ 132:172-74 August 6, 1921; _Living
Age_ 311:173-75 October 15, 1921.

183. Here they come. _Esquire_ 13:80-81 March 1940.

184. His chest of drawers. _Household Magazine_ 39:4-5 August 1939. _SAR._

185. How I came to communism: symposium. _New Masses_ 8:8-9 September
1932.

186. I get so I can’t go on. _Story_ 3:55-62 December 1933.

187. I live a dozen lives. _American Magazine_ 128:58 October 1939.

188. I want to know why. _Smart Set_ 60:35-40 November 1919. _TE_, _SAR_.
A Spanish translation, “Quisiera saber por que,” by Lenka Franulic
appears in his _Antología del cuento norteamericano_. Santiago, Ercilla,
1943. p.109-19.

189. I want to work! _Today_ 1:10-11, 22 April 28, 1934.

190. I was a bad boy. _This Week_ May 18, 1941, p.12, 17. _SAM_ (with
revisions).

191. I will not sell my papers. _Outlook_ 150:1286-87 December 5, 1928.
_HT_ (revised and entitled “Will you sell your newspapers”).

192. I’m a fool. _Dial_ 72:119-29 February 1922; _London Mercury_ 6:19-27
May 1922 (entitled “I am a fool”). _HM_, _SAR_, _PSA_.

193. An impression of Mexico—its people. _Southern Literary Messenger_
1:241-42 April 1939.

194. In a boxcar. _Vanity Fair_ 31:76, 114 October 1928.

195. In a strange town. _Scribner’s Magazine_ 87:20-25 January 1930. _DW._

196. Italian poet in America. _Decision_ 2:8-15 August 1941.

197. It’s a woman’s age. _Scribner’s Magazine_ 88:613-18 December 1930.
_PW._

198. J. J. Lankes and his woodcuts. _Virginia Quarterly Review_ 7:18-27
January 1931. _NS._

199. Jug of moon. _Today_ 2:6-7, 23 September 15, 1934. _SAM._

200. A jury case. _American Mercury_ 12:431-34 December 1927. _DW._

201. Just walking. _Vanity Fair_ 30:76, 108 April 1928. _HT._

202. A landed proprietor. _Rotarian_ 58:8-10 March 1941.

203. Legacies of Ford Madox Ford. _Coronet_ 8:135-36 August 1940. _SAM._

204. Let’s go somewhere. _Outlook_ 151:247, 278, 280 February 13, 1929.

205. Let’s have more criminal syndicalism. _New Masses_ 7:3-6 February
1932.

206. Lift up thine eyes. _Nation_ 130:620-22 May 28, 1930. _PW._

207. Lindsay and Masters. _New Republic_ 85:194-95 December 25, 1935. A
review of Edgar Lee Masters’ _Vachel Lindsay_.

208. The line-up. _American Spectator_ 2,no.20:1 June 1934.

209. Listen, Hollywood! _Photoplay_ 52:28-29 March 1938.

210. Listen, Mr. President. _Nation_ 135:191-93 August 31, 1932. _SAM._
An open letter to Herbert Hoover.

211. Little magazines. _Intermountain Review_ 2,no.2:1 Fall 1937.

212. Little people and big words. _Reader’s Digest_ 39:118-20 September
1941.

213. A living force in literature. _Brentano’s Book Chat_ June 1921,
p.17-18. Concerns D. H. Lawrence.

214. Living in America. _Nation_ 120:657-58 June 10, 1925.

215. Look out, brown man! _Nation_ 131:579-80 November 26, 1930.

216. Loom dance. _New Republic_ 62:292-94 April 30, 1930. _PW_, _SAR_.

217. The lost novel. _Scribner’s Magazine_ 84:255-58 September 1928.
_ALN_, _DW_.

218. Machine child-rearing. _New York Times_ November 8, 1931, section
IX, p.2. Excerpt from speech during the Bertrand Russell-Sherwood
Anderson debate on abolition of the family.

219. Machine song: automobile. _Household Magazine_ 30:3 October 1930.
_PW_, _SAR_.

220. The magnificent idler. _Reader’s Digest_ 28:88-90 February 1936.
Excerpt from _A Story Teller’s Story_.

221. Making it clear. _Agricultural Advertising_ 24:16 February 1913.

222. The man and the book. _Reader_ 3:71-73 December 1903.

223. The man at the filling station. _Vanity Fair_ 30:53, 88, 90 August
1928.

224. The man in the brown coat. _Little Review_ 7:18-21 January-March
1921. _TE_, _NT_.

225. A man’s mind. _New Republic_ 63:22-23 May 21, 1930. A review of D.
H. Lawrence’s _Assorted Articles_. _NS._

226. A man’s song of life. _Virginia Quarterly Review_ 9:108-14 January
1933. _NS_ (entitled “Lawrence again”).

227. The man’s story. _Dial_ 75:247-64 September 1923. _HM_, _SAR_.

228. Many marriages. _Dial_ 73:361-82, 533-48, 623-44; 74:31-49, 165-82,
256-72 October 1922-March 1923.

229. Maury Maverick in San Antonio. _New Republic_ 102:398-400 March 25,
1940.

230. Meeting Ring Lardner. _New Yorker_ 9:36, 38 November 25, 1933. _NS_,
_SAR_.

231. A meeting South. _Dial_ 78:269-79 April 1925. _SAN_, _DW_, _SAR_,
_PSA_.

232. Mid-American prayer. _Seven Arts_ 2:190-92 June 1917.

233. Mid-American songs (Song of Stephen the Westerner; American spring
song; A visit; Song of the drunken business man; Evening song; Song of
industrial America). _Poetry_ 10:281-91 September 1917. _MAC._

234. Mill girls. _Scribner’s Magazine_ 91:8-12, 59-64 January 1932. _BD_,
_SAR_.

235. Mr. Joe’s doctor. _American Magazine_ 118:81-82 August 1934.

236. A moonlight walk. _Red Book_ 70:43-45, 100-04 December 1937. _SAR._

237. Mother. _Seven Arts_ 1:452-61 March 1917. _WO._

238. Motor trip. _American Spectator_ 2,no.22:9 August 1934.

239. A mountain dance. _Vanity Fair_ 29:59, 110 November 1927. _HT._

240. A mountain marriage. _Fight Against War and Fascism_ 3:16-17, 25
October 1936. _KB._

241. My fire burns. _Survey_ 47:997-1000 March 25, 1922. _SAN_ (entitled
“King coal”).

242. The nationalist. _American Spectator_ 2,no.14:1 December 1933;
_Fortnightly Review_ 142:24-29 July 1934; _American Spectator Yearbook_.
New York, Frederick A. Stokes, 1934. p.3-10. _PA._

243. Nearer the grass roots. _Outlook_ 148:3-4, 27 January 1928. _NGR._

244. A new chance for the men of the hills. _Today_ 1:10-11, 22-23 May
12, 1934. _PA_, _SAR_.

245. The New Englander. _Dial_ 70:143-58 February 1921. _TE_, _SAR_.

246. The new note. _Little Review_ 1:23 March 1914. Reprinted: _Little
Review Anthology_, p.13-15.

247. New Orleans: a prose poem in the expressionist manner. _Vanity Fair_
26:36, 97 August 1926.

248. New Orleans, _The double dealer_ and the modern movement in America.
_Double Dealer_ 3:119-26 March 1922.

249. New paths for old. _Today_ 1:12-13, 32 April 7, 1934.

250. A new testament. _Double Dealer_ 3:64-67 February 1922. _NT_
(entitled “A thinker”).

251. A new testament (The visit in the morning; Negro on the docks; The
ripper; Chicago; Hunger; Death). _Vanity Fair_ 28:75 April 1927. _NT._

252. A new testament: The builder. _Double Dealer_ 3:311 June 1922. _NT._

253. A new testament: A man speaks out of the new confusion. _Playboy_
2,no.1:9-11 First quarter 1923.

254. A new testament: Testament one. _Little Review_ 6:3-6 October 1919.

255. A new testament: Testament two. _Little Review_ 6:19-21 November
1919. _NT_ (entitled “The dreamer”; with revisions).

256. A new testament: III. _Little Review_ 6:17-19 December 1919. _NT._ A
portion reprinted under title “Man standing by a bridge,” see item 164;
also _Literary Digest_ 93:34 May 21, 1927.

257. A new testament: IV-V _Little Review_ 6:15-17 January 1920. _NT_
(final section of “IV” entitled “In a workingman’s rooming house”; “V”
entitled “Word factories”). “V” also appeared in _Vanity Fair_ under
title “The word maker,” see item 282.

258. A new testament: VI-IX. _Little Review_ 6:12-16 March 1920. _NT._
“VI” also appeared under title “Ambition,” see item 164; “VII” appeared
in _Vanity Fair_ 28:75 April 1927 under title “Chicago”; “VIII” entitled
“Cities” in _NT_.

259. A new testament: X. _Little Review_ 6:58-60 April 1920.

260. A new testament: XI-XII. _Little Review_ 7:58-61 July-August 1920.
_NT._ Part of “XI” also appeared under title “Man walking alone,” see
item 164.

261. A new testament: No. 13. _Double Dealer_ 6:181-82 August-September
1924. _NT_ (entitled “A dreamer”). See also item 164.

262. New tyrants of the land. _Today_ 1:10-11, 20 May 26, 1934. _PA_
(with revisions).

263. New York. _Vanity Fair_ 28:33, 94 July 1927. _SAM._ A French
translation by Marguerite Gay appears in _Bibliothèque Universelle et
Revue de Genève_ January 1930, p.46-51.

264. Nice girl. _New Yorker_ 12:15-17 July 25, 1936.

265. No swank. _Today_ 1:4-5, 23-24 November 11, 1933. _NS._

266. Nobody’s home. _Today_ 3:6-7, 20-21 March 30, 1935.

267. Northwest unafraid. _Today_ 3:8-9, 22-23 January 12, 1935. _PA_
(entitled “Olsonville”; with revisions).

268. Not knocking. _Agricultural Advertising_ 9:22-23 December 1902.

269. Not sixteen. _Tomorrow_ 5:28-32 March 1946. _SAR._

270. A note on realism. _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ October
25, 1924, p.1-2. _SAN._

271. A note on story tellers. _Vanity Fair_ 28:42, 82 August 1927. _HT._

272. Notes out of a man’s life. _Vanity Fair_ 26:47, 98 March 1926. _SAN._

273. The novelist. _Little Review_ 2:12-14 January-February 1916. See
also item 167.

274. Off balance. _New Yorker_ 9:12-14 August 5, 1933.

275. Oh, the big words! _This Week_ March 31, 1940, p.2.

276. Ohio: I’ll say we’ve done well. _Nation_ 115:146-48 August 9, 1922.
_SAN._

277. On being a country editor. _Vanity Fair_ 29:70, 92 February 1928.
_HT_ (entitled “Notes for newspaper readers”).

278. On being published. _Colophon_ pt.1:[February 1930, 4p.]. Reprinted:
Adler, Elmer, ed. _Breaking into print._ New York, Simon and Schuster,
1937. p.3-7. Included with the reprint is a letter from Anderson to Elmer
Adler, dated December 27, 1936.

279. On conversing with authors. _Vanity Fair_ 28:40, 98 June 1927. _HT._

280. The other woman. _Little Review_ 7:37-44 May-June 1920. _TE._

281. Out of nowhere into nothing. _Dial_ 71:1-18, 153-69, 325-46
July-September 1921. _TE_, _SAR_.

282. Pages from a new testament (Addressed to a woman; The word maker).
_Vanity Fair_ 19:57 October 1922. _NT_ (the first as “A persistent
lover”; the second as “Word factories”). See also item 257.

283. Pastoral. _Red Book_ 74:38-39, 59 January 1940.

284. Paying for old sins. _Nation_ 139:49-50 July 11, 1934. A review of
Carl Carmer’s _Stars Fell on Alabama_ and Langston Hughes’ _The Ways of
White Folks_.

285. The persistent liar. _Tomorrow_ 6:10-12 September 1946.

286. Personal protest. _Canadian Forum_ 17:168-69 August 1937.

287. The philosopher. _Little Review_ 3:7-9 June-July 1916. _WO._

288. A plan. _Modern Monthly_ 7:13-16 February 1933. _PA_ (entitled
“Please let me explain”). _SAR._

289. Pop. _New Yorker_ 9:12 May 27, 1933.

290. Price of aristocracy. _Today_ 1:10-11, 23 March 10, 1934.

300. Prohibition. _Vanity Fair_ 27:68, 96 February 1927.

301. Queer. _Seven Arts_ 1:97-108 December 1916. _WO._

302. The rabbit-pen. _Harper’s_ 129:207-19 July 1914.

303. Real-unreal. _New Republic_ 63:103-04 June 11, 1930. A review of
Margaret Anderson’s _My Thirty Years’ War._ _NS._ Millett (item 696)
lists a reprinting in the form of a leaflet with the title “Sherwood
Anderson on Margaret Anderson.” No copy located.

304. The return. _Century_ 110:3-14 May 1925. _DW_, _SAR_.

305. The right to die: dinner in Thessaly. _Forum_ 95:40-41 January 1936.
_SAM._

306. A robin’s egg renaissance. _Story_ 19:11-28 September-October 1941.

307. Rot and reason (About country roads; About inquiries; About
cleverness; About suspicion; Paragraphs). _Agricultural Advertising_
10:56-58 November 1903.

308. Rot and reason (Doing stunts; Packingham; Of no value; Chicago
inspirations; The stamp as a salesman). _Agricultural Advertising_
10:12-14 April 1903.

309. Rot and reason (The golden harvest farmer; Golden harvest
manufacturers; The golden fake). _Agricultural Advertising_ 10:22-25
August 1903.

310. Rot and reason (The lightweight; The born quitter). _Agricultural
Advertising_ 10:18-20 March 1903.

311. Rot and reason (Knock no. 1; Knock no. 2; Boast no. 1).
_Agricultural Advertising_ 10:54-57 June 1903.

312. Rot and reason (The new job; The laugh of scorn; The traveling man;
Push, push, push; Unfinished contracts). _Agricultural Advertising_
10:13-16 February 1903.

313. Rot and reason (Office tone; Fun and work; Work in the dark).
_Agricultural Advertising_ 10:22-26 July 1903.

314. Rot and reason (The old and the new; A Christmas thought; Men that
are wanted). _Agricultural Advertising_ 10:50-51 December 1903.

315. Rot and reason (Twenty years in the West; What Henry George said
twenty years ago; Twenty years in figures; Fairs). _Agricultural
Advertising_ 10:17-19 October 1903.

316. Rot and reason (Unfinished; Finding our work). _Agricultural
Advertising_ 10:20-22 May 1903.

317. The sad horn blowers. _Harper’s_ 146:273-89 February 1923. _HM_,
_SAR_.

318. The sales master and the selling organization. _Agricultural
Advertising_ 12:306-08 April 1905.

319. Samovar. _American Spectator_ 2,no.21:3 July 1934.

320. Seeds. _Little Review_ 5:24-31 July 1918; _English Review_ 34:13-20
January 1922. _TE._

321. Senility. _Little Review_ 5:37-39 September 1918. _TE._

322. A sentimental journey. _Vanity Fair_ 29:46, 118 January 1928. _HT_,
_DW_, _SAR_.

323. Sherwood Anderson goes home. _Today_ 3:6-7, 23 December 8, 1934.
_PA_ (entitled “Night in a corn town”; with revisions).

324. Sherwood Anderson to Theodore Dreiser. _American Spectator_ 1,no.8:1
June 1933.

325. Sister. _Little Review_ 2:3-4 December 1915.

326. Sit-downers stick: opinions. _Literary Digest_ 123:8 February 13,
1937. A brief statement regarding sit-down strikes.

327. The situation in American writing: seven questions (Part II).
_Partisan Review_ 6,no.5:103-05 Fall 1939.

328. A small boy looks at his world. _Woman’s Home Companion_ 53:19-20,
42, 45 July 1926. _Tar_ (with revisions).

329. Small town notes. _Vanity Fair_ 30:58, 120 June 1928; 32:72, 106
April 1929; 32:48, 110 July 1929 (reprinted: _London Mercury_ 20:473-76
September 1929, under title “Small town notes: ashamed”); 33:72, 110, 114
September 1929.

330. So you want to be a writer? _Saturday Review of Literature_ 21:13-14
December 9, 1939; condensation in _Reader’s Digest_ 36:109-11 January
1940.

331. “Sold!” To the tobacco company. _Globe_ 2:30-35 July 1938;
condensation in _Youth Today_ 2:28-30 September 1939 under title “Sold.”

332. A soliloquy. _Agricultural Advertising_ 9:25 April 1902. (Signed
“Anderson”)

333. The South. _Vanity Fair_ 27:49-50, 138 September 1926. _HT._

334. Statements of belief II; further credos of America’s leading
authors. _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 68:204 October 1928. Reprinted (without title)
in Herrmann, Eva. _On parade, caricatures ..._ edited by Erich Posselt,
contributions by prominent authors. New York, Coward-McCann, 1929. p.10.

335. Stewart’s on the square. _New Yorker_ 10:77-80 June 9, 1934.

336. Stolen day. _This Week_ April 27, 1941, p.6, 23.

337. The story-teller’s job. _Book Buyer_ ser.4,v.2,no.8:8 December 1936.

338. A story-teller’s story. _Phantasmus_ 1:1-37, 109-64 May-June 1924.
_SS._

339. The story writers. _Smart Set_ 48:243-48 January 1916.

340. The strength of God. _Masses_ 8:12-13 August 1916. _WO._

341. The struggle. _Little Review_ 3:7-10 May 1916. Reprinted: _Little
Review Anthology_, p.55-59. _TE_ (entitled “War”).

342. Tar Moorhead’s father. _Woman’s Home Companion_ 53:19-20, 154-55
June 1926. _Tar_ (with revisions).

343. Tar’s day of bravery. _Woman’s Home Companion_ 53:25-26, 184-85
October 1926. _Tar_ (with revisions).

344. Tar’s wonderful Sunday. _Woman’s Home Companion_ 53:29-30, 50
November 1926. _Tar_ (with revisions).

345. Testament (containing songs of one who would be a priest); song
number two. _Double Dealer_ 7:59-60 November-December 1924. _NT_
(entitled “Song number two”).

346. Testament: one puzzled concerning himself. _Double Dealer_ 7:100
January-February 1925. _NT._

347. Testament: song number one. _Double Dealer_ 7:15-16 October 1924.
_NT._

348. Testament of two glad men. _Double Dealer_ 3:203-05 April 1922. _NT._

349. These mountaineers. _Vanity Fair_ 33:44-45, 94 January 1930. _DW._

350. They come bearing gifts. _American Mercury_ 21:129-37 October 1930.

351. They got this one. _Book Buyer_ n.s.1,no.4:10-11 June 1935. Excerpt
from _Puzzled America_.

352. The thinker. _Seven Arts_ 2:584-97 September 1917. _WO._

353. To remember. _American Spectator_ 1,no.7:1 May 1933. Reprinted:
_American Spectator Yearbook_. New York, Frederick A. Stokes, 1934.
p.172-74.

354. Tom Grey could so easily lead them. _Today_ 1:8-9, 23 March 24,
1934. _PA_ (entitled “A union meeting”; with revisions).

355. Tough babes in the woods. _Today_ 1:6-7, 22 February 10, 1934. _PA_,
_SAR_.

356. The triumph of a modern. _New Republic_ 33:245-47 January 31, 1923.
_HM._

357. The triumph of the egg. _Dial_ 68:295-304 March 1920. _TE_,
_SAR_, _PSA_ (entitled “The egg”). “L’Oeuf,” a French translation by
Bernard Fay, appears in _Revue Européenne_ 2:1-13 September 1923; a
Spanish translation, “La victoria del huevo,” is in John Peale Bishop’s
_Antología de escritores contemporáneos de los Estados Unidos_. Santiago,
Chile, Nascimento, 1944. v.1., p.262-76.

358. Two lovers. _Story_ 14:16-25 January-February 1939.

359. Unlighted lamps. _Smart Set_ 65:45-55 July 1921. _TE_, _SAR_.

360. The untold lie. _Seven Arts_ 1:215-21 January 1917. _WO_, _SAR_.

361. V. F. Calverton. _Modern Quarterly_ 11,no.7:41 Fall 1940.

362. Valley apart. _Today_ 3:6-7, 22-23 April 20, 1935.

363. Vibrant life. _Little Review_ 3:10-11 March 1916.

364. Village wassail. _Today_ 3:8-9, 20 January 26, 1935. _PA._

365. Virginia. _Vanity Fair_ 32:66, 74 August 1929. _SAM._

366. Virginia justice. _Today_ 2:6-7, 24 July 21, 1934. _SAR_ (entitled
“Justice”).

367. War of the winds. _Today_ 3:8-9, 20 February 23, 1935. _PA_
(entitled “Revolt in South Dakota”; with revisions).

368. We are all small-towners. _This Week_ June 16, 1940, p.2. _HT._

369. We would be wise: talking it out. _Agricultural Advertising_
10:45-47 January 1903.

370. What makes a boy afraid. _Woman’s Home Companion_ 54:19-20, 96
January 1927. _Tar_ (with revisions).

371. When America goes to war: a symposium. _Modern Monthly_ 9:201 June
1935.

372. When are authors insulted? _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 75:564 October 1932.
Letter to the editor signed by Sherwood Anderson, Waldo Frank, James
Rorty, William Jones, Elliot E. Cohen (National Committee for the Defense
of Political Prisoners).

373. When I left business for literature. _Century_ 108:489-96 August
1924. _SS._

374. When the writer talks. _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ April
18, 1925, p.1-2. _SAN._

375. When we care. _Twice a Year_ 10/11:238-44 Spring-Summer/Fall-Winter
1943. _SAR._

376. The white streak. _Smart Set_ 55:27-30 July 1918.

377. Whither the American writer (a questionnaire). _Modern Quarterly_
6,no.2:12 Summer 1932.

378. Why I live where I live. _Golden Book_ 16:398-400 November 1932.
_SAM._

379. Why I write. _Writer_ 49:363-64 December 1936.

380. Why men write. _Story_ 8:2, 4, 103, 105 January 1936.

381. Why there must be a Midwestern literature. _Vanity Fair_ 16:23-24
March 1921. _HM_, _SAR_ (entitled “Milk bottles”).

382. Why they got married. _Vanity Fair_ 32:74, 116 March 1929. _DW._

383. Winter day’s walk in New York. _American Spectator_ 2,no.15:3
January 1934.

384. A word of advice. _Literary Workshop_ 1,no.2:43 1934.

385. Worlds of fancy and of facts. _Woman’s Home Companion_ 53:27-28, 79
September 1926. _Tar_ (with revisions).

386. A writer’s conception of realism. _Writer_ 54:3-6 January 1941.
_SAR_; see also item 60.

387. A writer’s notes. _New Masses_ 8:10 August 1932. _SAM_ (as part of
the chapter “I become a protester”).

388. Writing it down. _Agricultural Advertising_ 9:46 November 1902.

389. The yellow gown. _Mademoiselle_ 15:94-95, 154-57 September 1942.
_SAR._

390. Young man from West Virginia. _Today_ 3:5, 23-24 December 1, 1934.
_PA_ (entitled “They elected him”).


_Serial Publications Edited by Anderson_

391. _American Spectator._ New York, N.Y. December 1933-March 1935.
(Anderson was one of six editors, the others being George Jean Nathan,
Ernest Boyd, James Branch Cabell, Eugene O’Neill, and Theodore Dreiser.)

392. _Commercial Democracy._ [Elyria, Ohio. 1909?-1910?] No file located.

393. _Marion Democrat._ Marion, Virginia. November 1927-1929.

394. _Smyth County News._ Marion, Virginia. November 1927-1929.


_Contributions to the Smyth County News_

    EDITORS’ NOTE: With the issue of November 3, 1927, Sherwood
    Anderson assumed the editorship of the _Smyth County News_. He
    continued to edit this and its companion weekly, the _Marion
    Democrat_, for more than two years, and it is generally
    acknowledged that during much of that period Anderson
    contributed an appreciable percentage of the articles published
    in both newspapers. Files of both papers are, unfortunately,
    exceedingly rare. The citations in this section have been drawn
    from the Newberry Library’s microfilm of the _Smyth County
    News_ covering the period November 3, 1927, through December
    26, 1929. We have been unable to examine a file of the _Marion
    Democrat_.

    The list which follows makes no attempt to include all of
    Anderson’s contributions to the _Smyth County News_. Rather,
    it is meant to give some indication of the type and variety
    of materials Anderson chose to publish along with the weekly
    accounts of local news. We have included only those articles
    signed with Anderson’s name or in his capacity as “Editor”
    (_i.e._, unsigned editorials are largely excluded), and
    reprintings of Anderson’s own stories and articles (often
    unsigned). Articles signed with the pseudonym “Buck Fever” are
    separately listed. The numerous anonymous and pseudonymous
    articles (e.g., letters from “Hannah Stoots” and various Coon
    Hollow folks) contributing to the Buck Fever fiction, though
    undoubtedly written by Anderson, have been omitted.

395. Alice. May 2, 1929, p.2.

396. The black hole of Marion. April 12, 1928, p.8. (Unsigned) _HT_.

397. Brothers. September 27, 1928, p.1-2. (Unsigned; reprinted from _TE_)

398. Cattle rustler picked up near Marion. December 22, 1927, p.1.
(Unsigned) _HT_.

399. A criminal’s Christmas. December 6, 1928, p.1, 5. (Unsigned) _HT_.

400. Editorial statement. July 19, 1928, p.1.

401. A garden masterpiece. June 7, 1928, p.2. (Unsigned, but includes
references to the writing of _Poor White_)

402. Glade Spring claims it’s the grass. May 10, 1928, p.3. (Signed “The
Editor”).

403. Hands. January 17, 1929, p.5, 8. Reprinted from _WO_.

404. In a box car. October 25, 1929, p.7. (Unsigned)

405. In gratitude. December 22, 1927, p.4. (An unsigned Christmas
editorial)

406. In New York. November 29, 1928, p.1. _HT._

407. In Washington. February 9, 1928, p.1, 3. _HT_, _PSA_.

408. The life of a country editor. February 16, 1928, p.1, 5. Reprinted
from _Vanity Fair_.

409. The lost novel. September 20, 1928, p.5. (Unsigned; reprinted from
_Scribner’s Magazine_)

410. A man of ideas. January 19, 1927, p.6-7. Reprinted from _WO_.

411. Milk bottles. January 10, 1929, p.2, 7. Reprinted from _HM_.

412. Nellie is dead; the print shop cat passes away. January 12, 1928,
p.6. (Unsigned) _HT_.

413. The newspaper and the modern age. August 15, 1929, p.1, 4, 10. A
speech made at the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia,
August 12, 1929.

414. Our new editor’s bow. November 3, 1927, p.1.

415. Print shop to have picture of Thomas Jefferson presented by Governor
Byrd. August 30, 1928, p.1. (Signed “The Editor”)

416. A sentimental journey. June 21, 1928, p.5. Reprinted from _Vanity
Fair_.

417. Soliloquy. January 31, 1929, p.3. Reprinted from _Vanity Fair_.

418. Sophistication. August 30, 1928, p.1, 3. Reprinted from _WO_.

419. The sophistication. May 23, 1929. p.1, 4.

420. That subscription. September 13, 1928, p.1. (Signed “The Editor”)

421. Tom Greer. March 8, 1928, p.4. (Unsigned) _HT_.

422. A traveler’s notes. February 7, 1929, p.1; February 14, 1929, p.1,
5; March 28, 1929, p.1, 5. (The April 4, 1929 “What Say” column continued
this series.)

423. A traveler’s notes: Elizabethton. April 18, 1929, p.1, 8.

424. The untold lie. December 27, 1928, p.7. Reprinted from _WO_.

425. War. November 24, 1927, p.5. Reprinted from _TE_.

426. What is happening. April 5, 1928, p.6. (Signed “The Editor”)

427. What say! (This column first appeared, unsigned, in the issue of
November 3, 1927, p.8, and was a weekly feature throughout Anderson’s
term of editorship. With the issue of November 10, 1927, a standard
heading incorporating Anderson’s picture was adopted, and in the November
17, 1927, issue notice of copyright appeared with the column. Poems,
sketches, and letters by other writers were often included along with
Anderson’s own pieces, and on a few occasions the entire column was given
over to the work of others.)

428. Why they got married. March 28, 1929, p.1, 4; April 4, 1929, p.2.
Reprinted from _Vanity Fair_.

429. Will you sell your news papers. November 8, 1928, p.2. (Unsigned)

430. The writer’s trade. January 3, 1929, p.4, 8. Reprinted from _Vanity
Fair_. _HT._


_Articles Signed “Buck Fever”_

431. Alas, poor Nellie. December 29, 1927, p.6. _HT._

432. The big June. June 14, 1928, p.1.

433. Boss back. January 17, 1929, p.1.

434. Buck Fever comments. January 26, 1928, p.8.

435. Buck Fever says. (This column first appeared in the issue for
December 8, 1927; next appeared December 29, 1927; and was not repeated
until February 2, 1928. In the February 9, 1928, issue the column
carried the line drawing of Buck by Wharton Esherick which thereafter
distinguished it. Usually a front-page feature, the column appeared
almost weekly from February through August, 1928; thereafter it appeared
irregularly on an average of twice a month, the last appearance being in
the issue for December 19, 1929. The column served primarily as an outlet
for Buck’s opinions and his accounts of the fictional happenings up Coon
Hollow way; Buck’s reports on actual local events usually took the form
of a news story with his by-line.)

436. Chilhowie officers tree the coon. May 31, 1928, p.2.

437. Come and dance. July 19, 1928, p.1.

438. The council. August 30, 1928, p.1.

439. Deep sea club on cruise. October 25, 1928, p.3.

440. Don’t you dare call it a scrap. December 29, 1927, p.5.

441. Fine hunting weather. November 17, 1927, p.1. _HT._

442. [Henry Mencken Park] March 8, 1928, p.8.

443. Henry Staley plunges into history. January 17, 1929, p.1.

444. Husband’s day in court. June 28, 1928, p.2.

445. In Coon Hollow. July 26, 1928, p.2.

446. In darkest Marion. November 17, 1927, p.1.

447. It may be the bunk. February 2, 1928, p.5.

448. Kiwanis club. January 26, 1928, p.1; February 2, 1928, p.1; February
9, 1928, p.1; April 5, 1928, p.1; April 26, 1928, p.1; May 31, 1928, p.1;
June 27, 1929, p.1; December 6, 1928, p.1.

449. Kiwanis show turns out the town. March 8, 1928. p.1.

450. Look out snakes. December 15, 1927, p.1.

451. Marion High wins first game of season. April 5, 1928, p.1.

452. Marion sports have big night. January 19, 1928, p.2.

453. Mayor bags ’em. November 24, 1927, p.1.

454. The melancholy maid. June 6, 1929, p.8.

455. Mrs. Jimmy Dutton. August 30, 1928, p.6. _HT._

456. Odd fellows have fine feast. January 26, 1928, p.4.

457. On the rialto. October 25, 1928, p.1; December 27, 1928, p.2;
January 31, 1929, p.1.

458. On the rialto; conversation with Uncle Steve Groseclose. April 25,
1929, p.1.

459. On the rialto—rain. October 11, 1928, p.7.

460. One day court. May 31, 1928, p.2.

461. 100 to 15 or 7 to 1. December 27, 1928, p.5.

462. Over the top. January 19, 1928, p.1.

463. Progress. June 20, 1929, p.1.

464. A question. July 26, 1928, p.2.

465. Rotarians to back Bud’s band. December 13, 1928, p.1.

466. Saltville boys have big night. April 12, 1928, p.2.

467. Sam’s Bible. May 31, 1928, p.3.

468. Scandal in Kiwanis club. June 28, 1928, p.1.

469. The school teachers. September 13, 1928, p.2.

470. Them Andersons. November 15, 1928, p.4.

471. They came. They saw. They conquered. March 8, 1928, p.1.

472. They left there; the gun did it. December 13, 1928, p.2.

473. They liked it. October 11, 1928, p.4.

474. Three McCormack sisters. January 19, 1928, p.1.

475. To Mrs. P. B. Y. July 12, 1928, p.5.

476. Town council. February 9, 1928, p.6.

477. Try this on your piano. December 1, 1927, p.1.

478. Wanted his wife. January 26, 1928, p.1. _HT._

479. Well well and oh oh. January 3, 1929, p.1.

480. What about it Ed? June 14, 1928, p.1.

481. What is a good steak? March 1, 1928, p.3.

482. What the boys in jail had for Christmas dinner. December 29, 1927,
p.7.




_PART II_

_WRITINGS ABOUT SHERWOOD ANDERSON_


_Books, Parts of Books, and Periodical Articles_

483. Aaron, Manley. “American first editions ... Sherwood Anderson,”
_Publishers’ Weekly_ 103:251 January 27, 1923.

484. “Abolition of family debated by authors [Bertrand Russell and
Sherwood Anderson],” _New York Times_ November 2, 1931, p.21.

485. Adams, James Donald. _The shape of books to come._ New York, Viking,
1944. p.69-73.

486. Adams, Mildred. “A small-town editor airs his mind,” _New York Times
Magazine_ September 22, 1929, p.6, 20.

487. Aiken, Conrad Potter. “Anderson, Sherwood,” in his _A reviewer’s
ABC._ New York, Meridian Books [1958] p.130-32.

488. Alexander, David C. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Letters_ 2:23-29 February
1928.

489. Almy, Robert F. “Sherwood Anderson: the non-conforming
rediscoverer,” _Saturday Review of Literature_ 28:17-18 January 6, 1945.

490. “An American book in British courts [_Many Marriages_],” _Literary
Digest_ 79:30 November 24, 1923.

491. Anderson, Karl James. “My brother, Sherwood Anderson,” _Saturday
Review of Literature_ 31:6-7, 26-27 September 4, 1948. Reprinted:
_Saturday Review treasury._ New York, Simon and Schuster, 1957. p.325-32.

492. Anderson, Margaret. _My thirty years’ war._ New York, Covici,
Friede, 1930. p.38-39 and passim.

493. “Anderson decries our ‘speakeasy’ era,” _New York Times_ December
7, 1931, p.24. (Includes excerpts from speech at a New York City mass
meeting, with some remarks on Dreiser.)

494. “Anderson letters given to Newberry Library of Chicago,” _Hobbies_
53:147 April 1948.

495. Arvin, Newton. “Mr. Anderson’s new stories,” _Freeman_ 8:307-08
December 5, 1923. Reprinted: _The Freeman book, typical editorials,
essays, critiques, and other selections from the eight volumes of the
Freeman, 1920-1924_. New York, Huebsch, 1924. p.359-62. Concerns _Horses
and Men_.

496. Ashley, Schuyler. “Dark laughter,” in his _Essay reviews_. Kansas
City, Lowell press, 1929. p.112-14.

497. ⸺. “Tar,” in his _Essay reviews_. Kansas City, Lowell press, 1929.
p.163-65.

498. Asselineau, Roger. “Réalisme, rêve et expressionnisme dans
_Winesburg, Ohio_,” _Archives des Lettres Modernes_ no.2:1-32 April 1957.

499. Baldwin, Charles Crittenton. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Men who
make our novels._ Rev.ed. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1924. p.26-33.

500. Barker, Russell H. “The storyteller role,” _College English_
3:433-42 February 1942.

501. Beach, Joseph Warren. “Auguries,” in his _The Outlook for American
prose_. Chicago, University of Chicago press [1926] p.199-280. Concerns
_A Story Teller’s Story_.

502. Beach, Sylvia. _Shakespeare and company._ New York, Harcourt, Brace,
1959. p.30-32 and passim.

503. Benét, William Rose. “_A story teller’s story_, by Sherwood
Anderson,” in Saturday Review. _Designed for reading; an anthology._ New
York, Macmillan, 1934. p.293-97.

504. Berg, Ruben Gustafsson. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Moderna
Amerikaner_. Stockholm, Hugo Gebers förlag [1925] p.113-25.

505. Berland, Alwyn. “Sherwood Anderson and the pathetic grotesque,”
_Western Review_ 15,no.2:135-38 Winter 1951.

506. Berti, Luigi. “Ulissismo di Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Boccaporto_.
Firenze, Parenti, 1940. p.133-40.

507. Birney, Earle. “Sherwood Anderson: a memory,” _Canadian Forum_
21:82-83 June 1941.

508. Bishop, John Peale. _Antología de escritores contemporáneos de los
Estados Unidos_ Santiago, Chile, Nascimento, 1944. v.1, p.262. (Includes
a Spanish translation of “The triumph of the egg,” p.262-76.)

509. ⸺. “This distrust of ideas (D. H. Lawrence and Sherwood Anderson),”
_Vanity Fair_ 22:10-12, 118 December 1921. Reprinted in his _Collected
essays_. New York, Scribner’s, 1948. p.233-40.

510. Bland, Winifred. “Through a college window,” _Story_ 19:82-86
September-October 1941. Concerns _Death in the Woods_.

511. Blankenship, Russell. _American literature as an expression of the
national mind._ New York, Holt [1935] p.665-72.

512. Bodenheim, Maxwell. “The pagan meditates,” _Oracle_ 2,no.2:12-13,
22-23 July 1926.

513. ⸺. “Psychoanalysis and American fiction,” _Nation_ 114:683-84 June
7, 1922.

514. Boyd, James. “A man in town,” _Story_ 19:88-91 September-October
1941.

515. Boynton, Percy Holmes. “Sherwood Anderson,” _North American Review_
224:140-50 March-May 1927. Reprinted in his _America in contemporary
fiction_. Chicago, University of Chicago press [1940] p.113-30; in his
_More contemporary Americans_. Chicago, University of Chicago press
[c1927] p.157-77.

516. Braak, Menno ter. “Twee methoden (Realisme en romantiek. Theodore
Dreiser en Sherwood Anderson, met lijst van Amerikaansche schrijvers
en tijdschriften),” _Vrije Bladen_ 6:97-110 April 1929. Concerns _Dark
Laughter_.

517. Brinnin, Malcolm. _The third rose._ Boston, Little, Brown [1959]
p.235-38 and passim.

518. Brooks, Cleanth and Warren, Robert Penn. “I want to know why.
Interpretation,” in their _Understanding fiction_. New York, Crofts, 1943
p.344-50.

519. Brooks, Van Wyck. _The confident years: 1885-1915._ New York,
Dutton, 1952. passim.

520. ⸺. [Introductory note to] “Letters to Van Wyck Brooks,” _Story_
19:42-62 September-October 1941.

521. Brossard, Chandler. “Sherwood Anderson: a sweet singer, ‘a smooth
son of a bitch’,” _American Mercury_ 72:611-16 May 1951.

522. Brown, John. _Panorama de la littérature contemporaine aux
États-Unis; introductions, illustrations, documents._ [Paris, G. Lang,
1954] p.89-92 and passim. (Includes Marguerite Gay’s translation,
“Boulettes de papier,” from _Winesburg, Ohio_, p.337-39.)

523. Bruno, Francesco. “Il mondo di Anderson,” _La Fiera Letteraria_
February 20, 1955, p.5-6.

524. Bruns, Friedrich. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Die amerikanische
Dichtung der Gegenwart_. Leipzig, Berlin, Teubner, 1930. p.34-40.

525. Buchanan, Annabel Morris. “Sherwood Anderson: country editor,”
_World Today_ (London) 53:249-53 February 1929.

526. Budd, Louis J. “The grotesques of Anderson and Wolfe,” _Modern
Fiction Studies_ 5:304-10 Winter 1959-60.

527. Burrow, Trigant. “Psychoanalytic improvisations and the personal
equation,” _Psychoanalytic Review_ 13:173-86 April 1926.

528. Calverton, Victor Francis. _The liberation of American literature._
New York, Scribner’s, 1932. p.425-30 and passim.

529. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson; a study in sociological criticism,” _Modern
Quarterly_ 2,no.2:82-118 Fall 1924. Reprinted in his _The newer spirit_.
New York, Boni and Liveright, 1925. p.52-118.

530. Canby, Henry Seidel. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Saturday Review of
Literature_ 23:10 March 22, 1941.

531. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson’s ‘Many Marriages’,” in his _Definitions_
(Second series). New York, Harcourt [1924] p.242-48. Also in Piercy,
Josephine Ketcham, ed. _Modern writers at work._ New York, Macmillan,
1930. p.155-64.

532. Cargill, Oscar. “The primitivists,” in his _Intellectual America_.
New York, Macmillan, 1941. p.311-98.

533. Carr, Edward Francis. _Sherwood Anderson, champion of women._
Unpublished M.A. thesis, University of Pittsburgh, 1946. 66p.

534. Carson, Saul. “In reply to Sherwood Anderson,” _Modern Monthly_
7:347, 351 July 1933.

535. Chapman, Arnold. “Sherwood Anderson and Eduardo Mallea,” Modern
Language Association of America. _Publications_ 69:34-45 March 1954.

536. Chase, Cleveland Bruce. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Saturday Review of
Literature_ 4:129-30 September 24, 1927.

537. ⸺. _Sherwood Anderson._ New York, R. M. McBride, 1927. 84p. (Modern
American writers. VII)

538. Cleaton, Irene and Cleaton, Allen. _Books and battles: American
literature, 1920-1930._ Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1937. p.179-83.

539. Collins, Joseph. “The doctor looks at biography,” _Bookman_ (N.Y.)
61:24-28 March 1925. Reprinted in his _The doctor looks at biography,
psychological studies of life and letters_. New York, Doran [c1925].
p.63-68. Concerns _A Story Teller’s Story_.

540. ⸺. “Sophism and Mr. Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Taking the literary
pulse_. New York, Doran [1924] p.29-47.

541. Coster, Dirk. “Amerikaansche letterkunde: Willa Cather. Edith
Wharton. Parrish. Sherwood Anderson,” _Stem_ 8:894-99 December 1928.

542. Cowley, Malcolm. “Anderson’s lost days of innocence,” _New Republic_
142:16-18 February 15, 1960.

543. Crane, Hart. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Double Dealer_ 2:42-45 July 1921.

544. Crawford, Nelson Antrim. “Sherwood Anderson, the wistfully
faithful,” _Midland_ 8:297-308 November 1922.

545. “Dark and lonely,” _Time_ 37:98 April 7, 1941.

546. Daugherty, George H. “Anderson, advertising man,” _Newberry Library
Bulletin_ ser.2,no.2:30-43 December 1948.

547. Davenport, Kenneth. _Sherwood Anderson: an appreciation of his life
and fiction._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Fort Hays Kansas State College,
1937. 55p.

548. De Dominicis, Anna Maria. “Lettere di Sherwood Anderson,”
_Letterature Moderne_ 6:711-20 November-December 1956.

549. Dell, Floyd. _Homecoming._ New York, Farrar and Rinehart [1933]
p.236-37 and passim.

550. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson, his first novel,” in his _Looking at life_.
New York, Knopf, 1924. p.79-84.

551. Dickinson, L. R. “Smyth county items,” _Outlook_ 148:581-83 April
11, 1928.

552. Dinsmoor, Mary Helen. _An inquiry into the life of Sherwood Anderson
as reflected in his literary works._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Ohio
University, Athens, 1939. 60 p. (Abstract in Ohio. University. Athens.
_Abstracts of masters’ theses._ 1939-40. p-14)

553. Dreiser, Theodore. _Letters of Theodore Dreiser: a selection._ Ed.
by Robert H. Elias. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania press [1959]
3 vols. passim. (Includes letters to and from Anderson)

554. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Story_ 19:4 September-October 1941.

555. Duffey, Bernard. “The struggle for affirmation—Anderson, Sandburg,
Lindsay,” in his _The Chicago renaissance in American letters_. [Lansing]
Michigan State College press, 1954. p.194-209.

556. “Editorial,” _American Spectator_ 2,no.14:1 December 1933.

557. Edgar, Pelham. “Four American writers: Anderson, Hemingway, Dos
Passos, Faulkner,” in his _The art of the novel_. New York, Macmillan,
1933. p.338-51.

558. Eschelmüller, Valerie. _Sherwood Anderson. Versuch einer kritischen
Betrachtung seines Prosawerkes._ Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation,
Universität Wien, 1955. 148p.

559. “An exponent of the new psychology,” _Literary Digest_ 73:33 April
1, 1922. Concerns Rebecca West’s article in _New Statesman_, item 793.

560. Fadiman, Clifton. “Sherwood Anderson: the search for salvation,”
_Nation_ 135:454-56 November 9, 1932.

561. Fagin, Nathan Bryllion. _The phenomenon of Sherwood Anderson; a
study in American life and letters._ Baltimore, Rossi-Bryn, 1927. 156p.

562. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _South Atlantic Quarterly_ 43:256-62 July
1944.

563. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson, the liberator of our short story,” _English
Journal_ 16:271-79 April 1927.

564. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson and our anthropological age,” _Double Dealer_
7:91-99 January-February 1925.

565. Farrell, James Thomas. “A memoir on Sherwood Anderson,”
_Perspective_ 7:83-88 Summer 1954. Reprinted in his _Reflections at
fifty_. New York, Vanguard, 1954. p.164-68 (under title “A note on
Sherwood Anderson”).

566. Faulkner, William. “Prophets of the new age: Sherwood Anderson,”
_Dallas Morning News_ April 26, 1925, section III, p.7. Reprinted:
_Princeton University Library Chronicle_ 18:89-94 1957.

567. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson. An appreciation,” _Atlantic_ 191:27-29 June
1953.

568. Fay, Bernard. “Sherwood Anderson,” in Llona, Victor, ed. _Les
romanciers américains_, Paris, Denoël [1931] p.7-14. (Also includes Fay’s
translation, “L’Oeuf,” p.15-36)

569. ⸺. “Portrait de Sherwood Anderson: américain,” _Revue de Paris_
année 41, tome 5:886-901 October 15, 1934.

570. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Vie de Peuples_ 7:920-26 August 10, 1922.

571. Feldman, Eugene. _The isolation of the individual as seen by
Sherwood Anderson._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Columbia University, 1947.
46p.

572. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson’s search,” _Psychoanalysis_ 3,no.3:44-51 1955.

573. Fenton, Charles A. _The apprenticeship of Ernest Hemingway._ New
York, Farrar, Straus and Young [1954] p.116-20, 145-50 and passim.

574. Ferres, John Howard. _The right place and the right people:
Sherwood Anderson’s search for salvation._ Ph.D. dissertation, Louisiana
State, 1959. University Microfilms publication #59-1531. (Abstract in
_Dissertation Abstracts_ 19:3302-03 1959)

575. Flanagan, John T. “Hemingway’s debt to Sherwood Anderson,” _Journal
of English and Germanic Philology_ 54:507-20 October 1955. Reprinted:
Illinois. University. Department of English. _Studies by members of the
English Department, in memory of John Jay Parry._ Urbana, University of
Illinois, 1955. p.47-60.

576. ⸺. “The permanence of Sherwood Anderson,” _Southwest Review_
35:170-77 Summer 1950.

577. Fontanet, Georges. “Quelques thèmes essentiels de Sherwood
Anderson,” in _Romanciers américains contemporains_. Paris, Didier
[1946?] (Cahiers des langues modernes, 1) p.87-113.

578. Forer, Valeria. “A note on Sherwood Anderson,” _Shenandoah_ 2:8-9
Summer 1951.

579. Frank, Waldo. “Emerging greatness,” _Seven Arts_ 1:73-78 November
1916. Reprinted in his _Salvos, an informal book about books and plays_.
New York, Boni and Liveright [c1924] p.31-40.

580. ⸺. _Our America._ New York, Boni and Liveright [1920] p.136-44.
(English edition [1922] entitled _The new America_)

581. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _In the American jungle (1925-1936)_.
New York, Farrar and Rinehart [1937] p.93-96.

582. ⸺. “_Winesburg, Ohio_ after twenty years,” _Story_ 19:29-33
September-October 1941.

583. Franulic, Lenka. “Dreiser, Anderson y la escuela naturalista,” in
his _Antología del cuento norteamericano._ Santiago, Ercilla, 1943.
p.xxv-xxviii. (Includes Spanish translation of “I want to know why,”
p.109-19)

584. Friend, Julius W. “The philosophy of Sherwood Anderson,” _Story_
19:37-41 September-October 1941.

585. Galantière, Lewis. “French reminiscence,” _Story_ 19:64-67
September-October 1941.

586. Garnett, Edward. “A note on two American novelists: Joseph
Hergesheimer and Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Friday nights_. London,
Cape; New York, Knopf, 1922. p.335-46.

587. Geismar, Maxwell David. “Anderson’s _Winesburg_,” _New York Times
Book Review_ July 18, 1943, p.4.

588. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: last of the townsmen,” in his _The last of
the provincials_. Cambridge, Houghton Mifflin, 1947. p.223-84.

589. Gelfant, Blanche Housman. “Sherwood Anderson, Edith Wharton, and
Thomas Wolfe,” in her _The American city novel_. Norman, University of
Oklahoma press [1954] p.95-132.

590. Gerould, Katharine F. “Stream of consciousness,” _Saturday Review of
Literature_ 4:233-35 October 22, 1927.

591. Gold, Herbert. “_Winesburg, Ohio_: the purity and cunning of
Sherwood Anderson,” _Hudson Review_ 10:548-57 Winter 1957-58. Reprinted:
Shapiro, Charles, ed. _Twelve original essays on great American novels._
Detroit, Wayne State University press, 1958. p.196-209.

592. “The gossip shop,” _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 55:90-91 March 1922.

593. Gozzi, Raymond Dante. “A bibliography of Sherwood Anderson’s
contributions to periodicals, 1914-1946,” _Newberry Library Bulletin_
ser.2, no.2:71-82 December 1948.

594. ⸺. _A descriptive bibliography of Sherwood Anderson’s contributions
to periodicals._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Columbia University, 1947. 213p.

595. Grana, Gianni. “La rinàscita del naturalismo in America: Anderson e
Dreiser,” _La Fiera Letteraria_ January 15, 1956, p.4.

596. Green, Paul and Green, Elizabeth L. _Contemporary American
literature, a study of fourteen outstanding American writers ..._ Chapel
Hill, University of North Carolina press [c1925] p.27-29. A study outline.

597. Gregory, Alyse. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Dial_ 75:243-46 September 1923.

598. Grillo, Giuseppe. “Ingenuità e vizio in Sherwood Anderson,” _Idea;
settimanale di cultura_ 6,no.16:3-4 April 18, 1954.

599. Gronna, Anne T. M. _An analysis of two stories by Sherwood
Anderson._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, State University of Iowa, 1949. 66p.

600. Guido, Augusto. “Cavalli da corsa e vomini dell’ Ohio,” _La Fiera
Letteraria_ October 23, 1949, p.5.

601. Hackett, Francis. “A new novelist,” in his _Horizons_. New York,
Huebsch, 1918. p.50-56. Concerns _Windy MacPherson’s Son_.

602. ⸺. “To American workingmen,” in his _Horizons_. New York, Huebsch,
1918, p.57-61. Concerns _Marching Men_.

603. Halleck, Reuben Post. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _The romance of
American literature_. New York, Cincinnati, American Book Co. [1934]
p.328-31.

604. Hansen, Harry. “Anderson in Chicago,” _Story_ 19:34-36
September-October 1941.

605. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: corn-fed mystic, historian of the middle age
of man,” in his _Midwest portraits_. New York, Harcourt [1923] p.109-79.

606. Hart, Robert Charles. _Writers on writing: the opinions of six
modern American novelists on the craft of fiction._ Ph.D. dissertation,
Northwestern University, 1954. 489p. University Microfilms publication
#9241. (Abstract in _Dissertation Abstracts_ 14:1720-21 1954)

607. Hartley, Marsden. “Spring, 1941,” _Story_ 19:97-98 September-October
1941.

608. Hartwick, Harry. “Broken face gargoyles,” in his _The foreground
of American fiction_. New York, Cincinnati, American Book Co. [1934]
p.111-50.

609. Hatcher, Harlan Henthorne. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Creating the
American novel_. New York, Farrar and Rinehart, 1935. p.155-71.

610. Haught, Viva Elizabeth. _The influence of Walt Whitman on Sherwood
Anderson and Carl Sandburg._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Duke University,
1936. 147p.

611. Havighurst, Walter. _Masters of the modern short story._ New York,
Harcourt, 1955. p.xii-xiii. Concerns “Brother death.”

612. Hazard, Lucy Lockwood. _The frontier in American literature._ New
York, Crowell [1927] p.290-98.

613. “Heading for matriarchy,” _New York Times_ November 23, 1931,
p.18. Editorial concerning the “no women’s clubs” clause in Anderson’s
contracts.

614. Hecht, Ben. _A child of the century._ [New York] Simon and Schuster,
1954. p.225-32.

615. ⸺. “Go scholar—gypsy!” _Story_ 19:92-93 September-October 1941.

616. Hellesnes, Nils. “Sherwood Anderson, den einsame Amerikanaren,” _Syn
og Seyn_ 53:433-39 November 1947.

617. Hepburn, James G. “Disarming and uncanny visions: Freud’s ‘the
uncanny’ with regard to form and content in stories by Sherwood Anderson
and D. H. Lawrence,” _Literature and Psychology_ 9,no.1:9-12 Winter 1959.

618. Herbst, Josephine. “Ubiquitous critics and the author,” _Newberry
Library Bulletin_ 5:1-13 December 1958.

619. Hicks, Granville. “Two roads,” in his _Great tradition_. Rev.ed. New
York, Macmillan, 1935. p.207-56.

620. Hilton, Earl Raymond. “The evolution of Sherwood Anderson’s ‘Brother
death’,” _Northwest Ohio Quarterly_ 24:125-30 Summer 1952.

621. ⸺. _The purpose and method of Sherwood Anderson._ Unpublished Ph.D.
dissertation, University of Minnesota, 1950.

622. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson and ‘heroic vitalism’,” _Northwest Ohio
Quarterly_ 29:97-107 Spring 1957.

623. Hind, Charles Lewis. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Authors and I_.
New York, John Lane, 1921. p.19-23.

624. Hoffman, Frederick John. “Anderson—psychoanalyst by default,” in
his _Freudianism and the literary mind_. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State
University press, 1945. p.230-55.

625. ⸺. _Freudianism: a study of influences and reactions, especially as
revealed in the fiction of James Joyce, D. H. Lawrence, Sherwood Anderson
and Waldo Frank._ Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University,
1942. 363p. (Abstract in Ohio. State University. _Abstracts of doctoral
dissertations_ no.41:81-88 1943)

626. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: a ‘groping, artistic, sincere personality’,”
_Western Review_ 18,no.2:159-62 Winter 1954. Concerns the Howe and
Schevill biographies of Anderson.

627. ⸺. _The twenties._ New York, Viking, 1955. p.265-69 and passim.

628. “Homage to Sherwood Anderson,” _Story_ 19,no.91, September-October
1941. Special Anderson memorial issue.

629. Howe, Irving. “The book of the grotesque,” _Partisan Review_
18:32-40 January/February 1951. Reprinted in his _Sherwood Anderson_,
item 630.

630. ⸺. _Sherwood Anderson._ [New York] W. Sloan [1951] 271p. (The
American men of letters series)

631. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: an American as artist,” _Kenyon Review_
13:193-203 Spring 1951.

632. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson and D. H. Lawrence,” _Furioso_ 5,no.4:21-33
Fall 1950. Forms the chapter “In the Lawrencian orbit” in his _Sherwood
Anderson_, item 630.

633. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson and the American myth of power,” _Tomorrow_
8:52-54 August 1949. Forms the chapter “Conditions of fame” in his
_Sherwood Anderson_, item 630.

634. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson and the power urge,” _Commentary_ 10:78-80
July 1950. Forms part of the chapter “A will to splendor” in his
_Sherwood Anderson_, item 630.

635. Huddleston, Sisley. _Paris salons, cafés, studios ... being social,
artistic, and literary memories._ New York, Blue Ribbon Books [1928]
p.78-82.

636. Huebsch, Benjamin W. “Footnotes to a publisher’s life,” _Colophon_
n.s.2,no.3:415-17 Summer 1937.

637. “Interview with Sherwood Anderson,” Brentano’s _Book Chat_ April
1921, p.18-19.

638. Izzo, Carlo. _Storia della letteratura nord-americana._ [Milan]
Nuova Accademia editrice [1957] p.622-24.

639. Jessup, Mary E. “A checklist of the writings of Sherwood Anderson,”
_American Collector_ 5:157-58 January 1928.

640. Johnson, A. Theodore. “Realism in contemporary American literature:
notes on Dreiser, Anderson, Lewis,” _Southwestern Bulletin_ (Memphis)
n.s.v.16,no.4:3-16 September 1929.

641. Johnson, Merle D. _American first editions._ 4th ed., rev. and enl.
by Jacob Blanck. New York, Bowker, 1942. p.25-27.

642. Jones, Howard Mumford. “Portrait of a mid-westerner, lonely but
happy, simple but complex,” _New York Herald Tribune Books_ April 12,
1953, p.1, 19. From his introduction to the _Letters_.

643. Karsner, David. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Sixteen authors to
one_. New York, Copeland, 1928. p.45-63.

644. Kaufman, Wolfe. “Sherwood Anderson’s advice,” _Saturday Review of
Literature_ 33:21 August 26, 1950.

645. Kazin, Alfred. “The letters of Sherwood Anderson,” in his _The
inmost leaf_. New York, Harcourt [1955] p.223-28.

646. ⸺. “The new realism—Sherwood Anderson and Sinclair Lewis,” in his
_On native grounds_. New York, Reynal and Hitchcock [1942] p.205-26.

647. Kintner, Evelyn. _Sherwood Anderson: small town man, a study of the
growth, revolt, and reconciliation of a small town man._ Unpublished M.A.
thesis, Bowling Green State University, 1942. 161p. (Abstract in Bowling
Green State University. _Abstracts of masters’ theses, 1941-45_ p.41)

648. Kirchwey, Freda. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Nation_ 152:313-14 March 22,
1941.

649. Komroff, Manuel. “Procession in the rain,” _Story_ 19:94-95
September-October 1941.

650. Kranendonk, Anthonius Gerardus van. _Geschiedenis van de amerikaanse
literatur._ Amsterdam, G. A. van Oorschot, 1947. v.2, p.198-203.

651. Krutch, Joseph Wood. “Vagabonds,” in _American criticism, 1926_. New
York, Harcourt, 1926. p.108-11. Concerns _Dark Laughter_.

652. Kunitz, Stanley Jasspon, ed. _Living authors, a book of
biographies._ New York, H. W. Wilson, 1931. p.7-9.

653. ⸺. _Twentieth century authors._ New York, H. W. Wilson, 1942.
p.24-26.

654. Lawry, Jon S. “Death in the woods and the artist’s self in Sherwood
Anderson,” Modern Language Association of America. _Publications_
74:306-11 June 1959.

655. Leitich, Albert. “Der erzähler erzählt sein leben,” _Die Literatur_
30:391-92 1928.

656. Lennartz, Franz. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Ausländische Dichter
und Schriftsteller unserer Zeit_. Stuttgart, A. Kröner, 1955. p.10-12.

657. Lesser, Simon O. “The image of the father: a reading of ‘My
kinsman, Major Molineux’ and ‘I want to know why’,” _Partisan Review_
22:372-90 Summer 1955. Reprinted in his _Fiction and the unconscious_.
Boston, Beacon, 1957. p.224-34; and in Phillips, William. _Art and
psychoanalysis._ New York, Criterion Books, 1957. p.237-46.

658. LeVerrier, Charles. “L’adolescent attarde,” _L’Europe Nouvelle_
7,no.307:12-13 January 5, 1924. Concerns _Many Marriages_.

659. Levinson, Andrei IAkovlevich. “Sherwood Anderson et le dilemme
américain,” in his _Figures américaines; dix-huit études sur des
écrivains de ce temps_. Paris, Editions V. Attinger, 1929. p.20-28.

660. Lewis, Sinclair. “A pilgrim’s progress,” in his _The man from Main
Street; a Sinclair Lewis reader_. New York, Random House [1953] p.165-68.
Concerns _A Story Teller’s Story_.

661. Lewis, Wyndham. “Paleface: (12) Sherwood Anderson,” _The Enemy_
no.2:26-27 September [1928]. Reprinted with revisions and additions in
his _Paleface; the philosophy of the ‘melting pot’_. London, Chatto and
Windus, 1929. p.194-236.

662. Lewisohn, Ludwig. _Expressionism in America._ New York, Harper,
1932. p.485-88.

663. Liben, Meyer. “The book and the billing machine,” _New Directions_
no.8:71-73 1944.

664. _Literary history of the United States._ Edited by Robert E. Spiller
and others. New York, Macmillan, 1948. v.3, p.386-88; rev.ed. New York,
Macmillan, 1953. p.1229-36; Bibliography supplement. New York, Macmillan,
1959. p.77-78.

665. “Literary spotlight,” _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 55:157-62 April 1922.
Reprinted in Farrar, John Chipman, ed. _The literary spotlight._ New
York, Doran [1924] p.232-40.

666. Loggins, Vernon. “Back of the mask,” in his _I hear America_. New
York, Crowell, 1937. p.143-74.

667. “Long-Critchfield dinner,” _Agricultural Advertising_ 12:421 May
1905. An account of a corporation banquet held May 1, 1905, at which
Anderson spoke on “making good.”

668. Lovett, Robert Morss. “The promise of Sherwood Anderson,” _Dial_
72:78-83 January 1922. Reprinted: Zabel, Morton Dauwen, ed. _Literary
opinion in America._ New York, Harper, 1934. p.327-32. Concerns _The
Triumph of the Egg_.

669. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _English Journal_ 13:531-39 October 1924.

670. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _New Republic_ 89:103-05 November 25, 1936.
Reprinted: Cowley, Malcolm, ed. _After the genteel tradition._ New York,
Norton, 1937. p.88-99.

671. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson, American,” _Virginia Quarterly Review_
17:379-88 Summer 1941. Reprinted: Zabel, Morton Dauwen, ed. _Literary
opinion in America._ Rev.ed. New York, Harper [1951] p.478-84.

672. Lowrey, Burling Hunt. _A study of Sherwood Anderson’s short
stories._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Cornell University, 1946. 67p.

673. Luccock, Halford E. _Contemporary American literature and religion._
New York, Willett, Clark, 1934. p.68-71.

674. Lundkvist, Artur. “Anderson sökaren,” in his _Atlantvind_.
Stockholm, Albert Bonniers Förlag [1932] p.29-43.

675. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Diktare och avslöjare i Amerikas
moderna litteratur_. Stockholm, Koop, 1942. p.87-97.

676. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Tre amerikaner:
Dreiser—Lewis—Anderson_. Stockholm, A. Bonnier [1939] p.46-63.

677. McCole, Camille John. “Sherwood Anderson—congenital Freudian,”
_Catholic World_ 130:129-33 November 1929. Reprinted in his _Lucifer at
large_. London, New York, Longmans, Green, 1937.

678. MacDonald, Dwight. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Yale Literary Magazine_
93:209-43 July 1928.

679. McIntyre, Ralph Elwood. _The short stories of Sherwood Anderson._
Unpublished M.A. thesis, Columbia University, 1949. 211p.

680. McNicol, Elinore Campbell. _The American scene as Sherwood Anderson
depicts it._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, University of Colorado, 1934.
80p. (Abstract in Colorado. University. _Abstracts of theses for higher
degrees_ 22,no.1:46 November 1934)

681. Mahoney, John J. “An analysis of _Winesburg, Ohio_,” _Journal of
Aesthetics and Art Criticism_ 15:245-52 December 1956.

682. Maillard, Denyse. _L’enfant américain dans le roman du middle-west._
Paris, Nizet, 1935. passim.

683. Mainsard, Joseph. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Études_ 190:303-25 February
8, 1927.

684. Mais, Stuart Petre Brodie. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Some modern
authors_. London, Richards, 1923. p.17-31.

685. Marble, Annie R. “Sherwood Anderson,” in her _A study of the modern
novel, British and American, since 1900_, New York, Appleton, 1928.
p.372-77.

686. Marshall, Margaret. “Notes by the way,” _Nation_ 154:574 May 16,
1942. Concerns Anderson’s _Memoirs_; for Paul Rosenfeld’s reply to this
article see item 726.

687. Mason, Franklin. “The county fair, II,” _Prairie Schooner_ 26:97-101
Spring 1952.

688. Mather, Frank Jewett. “Anderson and the National Institute of Arts
and Letters,” _Saturday Review of Literature_ 23:11 April 5, 1941.

689. Matthiessen, Francis Otto. _Theodore Dreiser._ New York, William
Sloane, 1951. p.169-71 and passim.

690. Mencken, Henry Louis. “America’s most distinctive novelist—Sherwood
Anderson,” _Vanity Fair_ 27:88 December 1926.

691. Michaud, Régis. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Panorama de la
littérature américaine contemporaine_. Paris, Kra [1926] p.170-73.

692. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson, psychanalyste,” _Revue des Cours et
Conférences_ année 27,ser.2:627-42 July 15, 1926. Reprinted in his _Le
roman américaine d’aujourd’hui_. Paris, Boivin [1926] p.150-68; English
translation (“Sherwood Anderson on this side of Freud”) in his _American
novel today_. Boston, Little, Brown, 1928. p.181-99.

693. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson, ou le rêveur évillé,” _Revue des Cours et
Conférences_ année 27,ser.2:521-40 June 30, 1926. Reprinted in his _Le
roman américaine d’aujourd’hui_. Paris, Boivin [1926] p.126-49; English
translation in his _American novel today_. Boston, Little, Brown, 1928.
p.154-80.

694. “A Mid-western ad man remembers: Sherwood Anderson, advertising
man,” _Advertising and Selling_ [28]:35, 68 December 17, 1936.

695. Miller, Henry. “Anderson the story-teller,” _Story_ 19:70-74
September-October 1941.

696. Millett, Fred Benjamin. _Contemporary American authors; a critical
survey and 219 bio-bibliographies._ New York, Harcourt, Brace, 1940.
p.221-25.

697. More, Paul Elmer. _The demon of the absolute._ Princeton, Princeton
University press, 1928. (New Shelburne essays, v.1) p.70-72.

698. Morris, Lawrence S. “Sherwood Anderson, sick of words,” _New
Republic_ 51:277-79 August 3, 1927.

699. Morris, Lloyd R. _Postscript to yesterday._ New York, Random House,
1947. p.145-48.

700. Moses, William Robert. _Sherwood Anderson, his life, his philosophy,
his books and what has been said about him._ Unpublished M.A. thesis,
Vanderbilt University, 1933. 145p. (Abstract in Vanderbilt University.
_Abstracts of theses_ August 1933, p.47)

701. Mueller, Frances Heckathorne. _The American scene in Sherwood
Anderson’s novels._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Columbia University, 1947.
57p.

702. Nuhn, Ferner. “Auction day in Missouri,” _Story_ 19:96
September-October 1941.

703. O’Brien, Edward Joseph. “Sherwood Anderson and Waldo Frank,” in his
_The advance of the American short story_. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1923.
p.247-65.

704. O’Sullivan, Vincent. “Précisions sur la littérature américaine,”
_Mercure de France_ 136:535-40 December 1, 1919.

705. _Oxford anthology of American literature._ Edited by William Rose
Benét and Norman Holmes Pearson. New York, Oxford University press [1946]
v.2, p.1632-33.

706. Panhuijsen, Jos. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Boekenschouw_ 35:14-19 May
15, 1941.

707. Pargellis, Stanley. “Foreword [to the Sherwood Anderson memorial
number],” _Newberry Library Bulletin_ ser.2,no.2:29 December 1948.

708. Parrington, Vernon. “Sherwood Anderson: a psychological naturalist,”
in his _Main currents in American thought_. New York, Harcourt, Brace,
1930. v.3, p.370-71 and passim.

709. Pattee, Fred Lewis. _The new American literature, 1890-1930._ New
York, Appleton-Century, 1937. p.332-37.

710. Pavese, Cesare. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Cultura_ (Milan) 10:400-07 May
1931.

711. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _La letteratura americana, e altri
saggi_. 2.ed. Torino, Einaudi, 1953. p.33-49.

712. Pearson, Norman Holmes. “Anderson and the new puritanism,” _Newberry
Library Bulletin_ ser.2, no.2:52-63 December 1948.

713. Phillips, William Louis. “The first printing of Sherwood Anderson’s
_Winesburg, Ohio_,” _Studies in Bibliography_ 4:211-13 1951-52.

714. ⸺. “How Sherwood Anderson wrote _Winesburg, Ohio_,” _American
Literature_ 23:7-30 March 1951.

715. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson’s two prize pupils,” _University of Chicago
Magazine_ 47:9-12 January 1955. Concerns Faulkner, Hemingway and Anderson.

716. ⸺. _Sherwood Anderson’s_ Winesburg, Ohio: _its origins, composition,
technique, and reception_. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of
Chicago, 1950. 218p.

717. Poppe, Hans Wolfgang. _Psychological motivations in the writings
of Sherwood Anderson._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, University of Southern
California, 1948. 138p.

718. Praz, Mario. “Parodia di _Riso nero_,” in his _Cronache letterarie
anglo-sassoni_. Roma, Edizioni di storia e letteratura, 1951. v.2,
p.190-95.

719. Quinn, Arthur Hobson. _American fiction, an historical and critical
survey._ New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1936. p.656-60.

720. Rascoe, Burton. _Before I forget._ Garden City, Doubleday, Doran,
1937. p.368 and passim.

721. ⸺. “Contemporary reminiscences,” _Arts and Decoration_ 21:36, 66-67
August 1924.

722. Raspillaire, Jeanne Henrietta. _The use of the oral idiom in the
modern American novel._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Ohio State University,
1941. 105p. (Abstract in Ohio State University. _Abstracts of masters’
theses_ 37:232 1941)

723. Raymund, Bernard. “The grammar of not-reason: Sherwood Anderson,”
_Arizona Quarterly_ 12:48-60; 136-48 Spring-Summer 1956.

724. Rideout, Walter B. “Why Sherwood Anderson employed Buck Fever,”
_Georgia Review_ 13:76-85 Spring 1959.

725. Ringe, Donald A. “Point of view and theme in ‘I want to know why’,”
_Critique_ 3:24-29 Spring-Fall 1959.

726. Rosenfeld, Paul. “The conflict in Anderson,” _Nation_ 154:611 May
23, 1942. In reply to M. Marshall’s review of the _Memoirs_, item 686.

727. ⸺. “The man of good will,” _Story_ 19:5-10 September-October 1941.

728. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Dial_ 72:29-42 January 1922.

729. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Port of New York_. New York,
Harcourt [1924] p.175-98.

730. “Sherwood Anderson’s work,” _Anglica_ 1:66-88 April-June 1946.

731. Rossi, Sergio. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Aevum_ 29:559-75
September-December 1955.

732. Sanderson, Arthur Marshall. _Sherwood Anderson’s philosophy of life
as shown by the action of characters in his novels._ Unpublished M.A.
thesis, Montana State University, 1948. 196p.

733. Saroyan, William. “His collaborators,” _Story_ 19:75-76
September-October 1941.

734. Schaik-Willing, Jeanne van. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Gids_ 1:477-82
March 1933.

735. Schevill, James. _Sherwood Anderson, his life and work._ [Denver]
University of Denver press [1951] 360p.

736. Schiffman, Joseph. “The alienation of the artist: Alfred Stieglitz,”
_American Quarterly_ 3:244-57 Fall 1951.

737. Schloss, George. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Hudson Review_ 4:477-80
Autumn 1951. Concerns Schevill’s biography of Anderson.

738. Schyberg, Frederik. _Moderne amerikansk litteratur, 1900-1930._
København, Gyldendal, 1930. p.63-71.

739. Sergel, Christopher. “Haunting voices; adapter of ‘Winesburg, Ohio’
recalls days in Chicago with Anderson,” _New York Times_ February 2,
1958, section II, p.3.

740. Sergel, Roger. “The man and the memory,” _Newberry Library Bulletin_
ser.2,no.2:44-51 December 1948.

741. ⸺. “Of Sherwood Anderson and ‘Kit Brandon’,” _Book Buyer_
ser.4,v.2,no.7:2-4 November 1936.

742. “7,000 in day view Times book fair; Sherwood Anderson speaker,”
_New York Times_ November 8, 1936, section II, p.10. Includes brief
excerpts from Anderson’s speech.

743. “Shall the home be abolished?” _Literary Digest_ 111:25-26 November
28, 1931. Concerns the Bertrand Russell-Sherwood Anderson debate.

744. Sherbo, Arthur. “Sherwood Anderson’s ‘I want to know why’ and
Messrs. Brooks and Warren,” _College English_ 15:350-51 March 1954.

745. Sherman, Stuart Pratt. “Sherwood Anderson’s tales of the new life,”
in his _Critical woodcuts_. New York, Scribner’s, 1926. p.3-17.

746. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 55:158-62 April 1922.

747. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Current Biography_ 1941, p.25-26.

748. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Deutsche Rundschau_ 267:99-100 May 1941.

749. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Nation_ 152:284 March 15, 1941.

750. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Publishers’ Weekly_ 139:1212 March 15, 1941.

751. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Times Literary Supplement_ July 13, 1922,
p.457. Reprinted: Times, London. Literary supplement. _American writing
today._ New York, New York University press, 1957. p.351-53. Concerns
_The Triumph of the Egg_.

752. “Sherwood Anderson and a Parisian critic,” _Living Age_ 320:429-30
March 1, 1924. Concerns LeVerrier’s article, item 658.

753. “The Sherwood Anderson papers,” _Newberry Library Bulletin_
ser.2,no.2:64-70 December 1948.

754. “Sherwood Anderson’s despair of letters,” _Literary Digest_ 115:15
May 13, 1933.

755. “Sherwood Anderson’s two-thousand-dollar prize stories,” _Current
Opinion_ 72:96-98 January 1922. Concerns _The Triumph of the Egg_.

756. Sillen, Samuel. “Sherwood Anderson,” _New Masses_ 39:23-26 March 25,
1941.

757. Sinclair, Upton Beall. “Muddlement,” in his _Money writes!_ New
York, Boni, 1927. p.119-23.

758. “Small townsman,” _New Republic_ 104:357 March 17, 1941.

759. Smith, Henry Nash. “The liberated artist,” _Nation_ 172:472-73 May
19, 1951. Concerns the Howe and Schevill biographies of Anderson.

760. Smith, Rachel. “Sherwood Anderson; some entirely arbitrary
reactions,” _Sewanee Review_ 37:159-63 April 1929.

761. Smith, Sarah Frances. _Poe and Anderson: a study in the tradition of
the short story._ Unpublished M.A. thesis, Alabama Polytechnic Institute,
1949. 89p. (Abstract in Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Graduate School.
_Abstracts of theses, 1948/49_ p.73-74)

762. Sprigge, Elizabeth. _Gertrude Stein; her life and work._ New York,
Harper, 1957. p.125-28 and passim.

763. Stegner, Wallace, and others. _The writer’s art._ Boston, Heath
[1950] p.142-45. Concerns “Adventure”.

764. Stein, Gertrude. _The autobiography of Alice B. Toklas._ New York,
Harcourt, Brace, 1933. p.241-42 and passim.

765. ⸺. “Idem the same—a valentine to Sherwood Anderson,” _Little Review_
9:5-9 Spring 1923.

766. ⸺. “Sherwood’s sweetness,” _Story_ 19:63 September-October 1941.

767. Sutton, William Alfred. “Sherwood Anderson: the advertising years,
1900-1906,” _Northwest Ohio Quarterly_ 22:120-57 Summer 1950.

768. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: the Cleveland year, 1906-1907,” _Northwest
Ohio Quarterly_ 22:39-44 Winter 1949-50.

769. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: the Clyde years, 1884-1896,” _Northwest Ohio
Quarterly_ 19:99-114 July 1947.

770. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson; the Spanish-American war year,” _Northwest
Ohio Quarterly_ 20:20-36 January 1948.

771. ⸺. _Sherwood Anderson’s formative years (1876-1913)._ Ph.D.
dissertation, Ohio State University, 1943. 237p. (Abstract in Ohio State
University. _Abstracts of doctoral dissertations_ no.41:195-97 1943) See
items 767-70 for published portions.

772. Takigawa, Motoo. “Sherwood Anderson’s sensuousness,”
_Eibungaku-Kenkyu_ (Studies in English literature. Tokyo Imperial
University. English Seminar. English Literary Society) 28:219-33 November
1952. In Japanese with English summary, p.277-78.

773. Taylor, Walter F. _A history of American letters._ New York,
American Book Co., 1936. p.376-80.

774. Taylor, William E. _Sherwood Anderson: his social creed._
Unpublished M.A. thesis, Vanderbilt University, 1950. 114p. (Abstract in
Vanderbilt University. _Abstracts of theses_ August 1951, p.100-01)

775. Thurston, Jarvis Aydelotte. _Sherwood Anderson: a critical study._
Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, State University of Iowa, 1946. 274p.
(Abstract in Iowa. University. _Doctoral dissertations and abstract
references_ 6:474-75 1942-48)

776. ⸺. “Anderson and ‘Winesburg’: mysticism and craft,” _Accent_
16:107-28 Spring 1956.

777. Trilling, Lionel. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Kenyon Review_ 3:293-302
Summer 1941. Reprinted with revisions in his _The liberal imagination_.
New York, Viking, 1950. p.24-33; Anchor Books, 1958. p.20-31; and in
Aldridge, John Watson, ed. _Critiques and essays on modern fiction._ New
York, Ronald [1952] p.319-27.

778. Tugwell, Rexford Guy. “An economist reads _Dark laughter_,” _New
Republic_ 45:87-88 December 9, 1925.

779. Untermeyer, Louis. _Heavens._ New York, Harcourt, Brace [1922]
p.70-71.

780. Van Doren, Carl. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Contemporary American
novelists, 1900-1920_. New York, Macmillan, 1922. p.153-57.

781. ⸺. “Revolt from the village,” in his _American novel, 1789-1939_.
Rev.ed. New York, Macmillan [1940] p.294-302.

782. ⸺. “Sinclair Lewis and Sherwood Anderson: a study of two moralists,”
_Century_ 110:362-69 July 1925.

783. ⸺ and Van Doren, Mark. _American and British literature since 1890._
Rev.ed. New York, Appleton-Century, 1939. p.98-100.

784. Van Doren, Mark. “Still groping,” in his _Private reader_. New York,
Holt, 1942. p.247-51. Concerns _Kit Brandon_.

785. Wagenknecht, Edward Charles. “Sherwood Anderson: the ‘cri de coeur’
as novel,” in his _Cavalcade of the American novel_. New York, Holt
[1952] p.311-18.

786. Walcutt, Charles Child. “Sherwood Anderson: impressionism and the
buried life,” _Sewanee Review_ 60:28-47 Winter 1952. Reprinted in his
_American literary naturalism, a divided stream_. Minneapolis, University
of Minnesota press [1956] p.222-39.

787. Walker, Don Devere. _Anderson, Hemingway, Faulkner: three studies
in mytho-symbolism in American literature._ Unpublished M.A. thesis,
University of Utah, 1947. 127p.

788. Warren, C. Henry. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Bookman_ (London) 74:22-24
April 1928.

789. Warren, Robert Penn. “Hawthorne, Anderson and Frost,” _New Republic_
54:399-401 May 16, 1928. Concerns Chase’s biography of Anderson.

790. Weber, Brom. “Anderson and ‘the essence of things’,” _Sewanee
Review_ 59:678-92 Autumn 1951.

791. Weltz, Friedrich. _Vier amerikanische Erzälungszyklen. J. London:
“Tales of the fish patrol,” Sh. Anderson: “Winesburg, Ohio,” J.
Steinbeck: “The pastures of heaven,” E. Hemingway: “In our time.”_
Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Universität München, 1953. 141p.

792. West, Ray Benedict. _The short story in America: 1900-1950._
Chicago, Regnery, 1952. p.46-48. Concerns “Death in the Woods.”

793. West, Rebecca. “Notes on novels,” _New Statesman_ 18:564, 566
February 18, 1922. Concerns _The Triumph of the Egg_ and _Poor White_.

794. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson, poet,” in her _Strange necessity_. Garden
City, Doubleday, Doran, 1928. p.309-20.

795. Whipple, Thomas King. “Sherwood Anderson,” _New York Evening Post
Literary Review_ 2:481-82 March 11, 1922.

796. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” _Berkeley_ no.1:3-4, 8 [1947]

797. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson,” in his _Spokesmen: modern writers and
American life_. New York, Appleton, 1928. p.115-38.

798. White, William Allen. “The country editor speaks,” _Nation_ 128:714
June 12, 1929. Concerns _Hello Towns_.

799. Wickham, Harvey. “Laughter and Sherwood Anderson,” in his _The
impuritans_. New York, L. MacVeagh; Toronto, Longmans, Green, 1929.
p.268-82.

800. Wilson, Edmund. “All God’s chillun,” in his _American earthquake_.
Garden City, Doubleday, 1958. p.124-28.

801. ⸺. _Classics and commercials; a literary chronicle of the forties._
New York, Farrar, Straus, 1950. p.105-06 and passim.

802. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson’s ‘Many marriages’,” _Dial_ 74:399-400 April
1923. Reprinted in his _The shores of light_. New York, Farrar, Straus
and Young, 1952. p.91-93.

803. ⸺. “Sherwood Anderson: letters to Van Wyck Brooks,” in his _The
shock of recognition_. Garden City, Doubleday, Doran, 1943. p.1256-90.

804. “Winesburg, Ohio: a _Life_ artist [D. Fredenthal] visits Sherwood
Anderson’s town,” _Life_ 20:74-79 June 10, 1946.

805. Winther, S. K. “The aura of loneliness in Sherwood Anderson,”
_Modern Fiction Studies_ 5:145-52 Summer 1959.

806. Wolfe, Thomas. “A letter from Thomas Wolfe,” _Story_ 19:68-69
September-October 1941.

807. Woolf, Virginia. “American fiction,” _Saturday Review of Literature_
2:1-3 August 1, 1925. Reprinted in her _The moment and other essays_. New
York, Harcourt, Brace, 1948. p.113-27.

808. “A writer should be poor,” _New York Times_ April 20, 1933, p.15.
Report of an interview with Anderson.

809. Young, Stark. “A marginal note,” in _Paul Rosenfeld, voyager in the
arts_. Edited by Jerome Mellquist and Lucie Wiese. New York, Creative Age
press, 1948. p.195-97.

810. ⸺. “The prompt book: new mine for dramatists,” _New York Times_
November 16, 1924, section VIII, p.1.

811. Zardoya, Concha. _Historia de la literatura norte-americana._
Barcelona, Madrid, etc., Editorial Labor, 1956. p.237-41.


_Poems, Parodies, and Miscellaneous Items_

812. Ford, Corey. “Three rousing cheers!!! The parody adventures of our
youthful heroes. VI. ‘And here let us say good-by’ or, Beer and light
Winesburg,” _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 62:682-84 February 1926.

813. Markey, Gene. _Literary lights, a book of caricatures._ New York,
Knopf, 1923. (unpaged)

814. Patchen, Kenneth. “We’re all fools (for Sherwood Anderson),” _Story_
19:87 September-October 1941. Poem.

815. Roskolenko, Harry. “Ballad; for Sherwood Anderson,” _Poetry_ 59:243
February 1942. Poem.

816. ⸺. “Hello towns,” _Story_ 19:36 September-October 1941. Poem.

817. Spratling, William Philip. _Sherwood Anderson & other famous
Creoles; a gallery of contemporary New Orleans ..._ arranged by William
Faulkner. New Orleans, Pelican Bookshop press, 1926. Faulkner’s
“Foreword” parodies Anderson’s style.

818. Ward, Christopher. “The triumph of the nut; or Too many marriages,”
in his _The triumph of the nut and other parodies_. New York, Holt, 1923.
p.1-9.

819. Weaver, Raymond W. “A complete handbook of opinion; being a
compendium of ten famous people’s evaluations of the great old and new,”
_Vanity Fair_ 30:68-69 April 1928.


_Reviews_

820. _Windy McPherson’s son_ (1916)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 44:393-94 December 1916. (H. W. Boynton);
    45:307 May 1917.

    _Dial_ 61:196-97 September 21, 1916. (William Lyon Phelps)

    _Nation_ 103:508 November 30, 1916. (H. W. Boynton); 104:49-50
    January 11, 1917.

    _New Republic_ 9:333-36 January 20, 1917. (Francis Hackett)

    _New York Times Book Review_ October 8, 1916, p.423.

    _North American Review_ 204:942-43 December 1916.

    _Times Literary Supplement_ November 9, 1916, p.536.

821. _Marching men_ (1917)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 46:338 November 1917. (H. W. Boynton)

    _Dial_ 63:274-75 September 27, 1917. (George B. Donlin)

    _Publishers’ Weekly_ 92:1372 October 20, 1917. (Doris Webb)

    _New Republic_ 12:249-50 September 29, 1917. (Francis Hackett)

    _New York Times Book Review_ October 28, 1917, p.442.

822. _Mid-American chants_ (1918)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 47:641-42 August 1918. (Thomas Walsh)

    _Dial_ 64:483-85 May 23, 1918. (Louis Untermeyer)

    _New Republic_ 17:288-89 January 4, 1919.

    _Poetry_ 12:155-58 June 1918. (A. C. Henderson)

    _Yale Review_ n.s.8:437-38 January 1919. (Grace H. Conkling)

823. _Winesburg, Ohio_ (1919)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 49:729-30 August 1919. (H. W. Boynton)

    _Dial_ 66:666 June 28, 1919.

    _Europe_ 15:114-16 September 15, 1927. (René Lalou)

    _Nation_ 108:1017 June 28, 1919.

    _New Republic_ 19:257-60 June 25, 1919.

    _New York Sun_ June 1, 1919, p.3.

824. _Poor White_ (1920)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 52:559-60 February 1921. (Robert C. Benchley)

    _Dial_ 70:77-79 January 1921. (Robert Morss Lovett)

    _Freeman_ 2:403 January 5, 1921. (C. Kay Scott)

    _Das literarische Echo_ 28:372-73 April 1925. (Friedrich
    Shönemann)

    _Nation_ 111:536-37 November 10, 1920.

    _New Republic_ 24:330 November 24, 1920. (Francis Hackett)

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ December 4, 1920, p.4.
    (Constance M. Rourke)

    _New York Times Book Review_ December 12, 1920, p.20.

    _Publishers’ Weekly_ 98:1888 December 18, 1920. (Eric Gershom)

825. _The triumph of the egg_ (1921)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 54:378 December 1921. (John Farrar)

    _Dial_ 72:79-83 January 1922. (Robert Morss Lovett)

    _Freeman_ 4:281-82 November 30, 1921. (Mary M. Colum)

    _Nation_ 113:602 November 23, 1921.

    _New Republic_ 28:383-84 November 23, 1921. (Robert Morss
    Lovett)

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ November 26, 1921,
    p.200. (William R. Benét)

    _New York Times Book Review_ December 4, 1921, p.10.
    (Hildegarde Hawthorne)

    _New York World_ December 6, 1921, p.11. (Heywood Broun)

    _North American Review_ 215:412-16 March 1922. (Lawrence Gilman)

    _Saturday Review_ 132:621 November 26, 1921.

826. _Horses and men_ (1923)

    _Freeman_ 8:307-08 December 5, 1923. (Newton Arvin)

    _Literary Digest International Book Review_ 2:42 December 1923.
    (Joseph Collins)

    _New Republic_ 37:99-100 December 19, 1923. (Robert Littell)

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ December 8, 1823,
    p.333. (Alyse Gregory)

    _New York Times Book Review_ November 25, 1923, p.7, 25.

    _New York Tribune Book News and Reviews_ November 25, 1923,
    p.20. (Burton Rascoe)

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 6:87 October 1928. (Marguerite Rocher)

827. _Many marriages_ (1923)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 57:210-11 April 1923. (Percy N. Stone)

    _Dial_ 74:399-400 April 1923. (Edmund Wilson)

    _Independent_ 110:232 March 31, 1923. (H. W. Boynton)

    _Nation_ 116:368 March 28, 1923. (Ludwig Lewisohn)

    _New Republic_ 37(Spring Book Section):6-8 April 11, 1923.
    (Robert Littell)

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ February 24, 1923,
    p.483. (Henry Seidel Canby)

    _New York Times Book Review_ February 25, 1923, p.10.

    _New York Tribune Book News and Reviews_ February 25, 1923,
    p.17. (Burton Rascoe)

    _New York World_ February 25, 1923, Section E, p.6. (Heywood
    Broun)

    _Saturday Review_ 136:281 September 8, 1923. (Gerald Gould)

828. _A story teller’s story_ (1924)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 60:492-93 December 1924. (Louis Bromfield)

    _Ex Libris_ (American Library, Paris) 2:176-77 March 1925.
    (Ernest Hemingway); 2:177 March 1925. (Gertrude Stein)

    _Literary Digest International Book Review_ 2:15-16 December
    1924. (Herbert S. Gorman)

    _Nation_ 119:640-41 December 10, 1924. (Harry Hansen)

    _New Republic_ 40:255-56 November 5, 1924. (Robert Morss Lovett)

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ November 1, 1924, p.4.
    (Walter Yust)

    _New York Times Book Review_ October 12, 1924, p.6. (Lloyd
    Morris)

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 3:175-78 December 1925. (C. Cestre)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 1:200 October 18, 1924.
    (William R. Benét)

    _Survey_ 53:288-89 December 1, 1924. (Arthur Kellogg)

829. _Dark laughter_ (1925)

    _Anglia Beiblatt_ 39:23-26 1928. (Walter Fischer)

    _Atlantic Monthly_ 136(Bookshelf):14 December 1925. (Archibald
    MacLeish)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 62:338-39 November 1925. (Herschel Brickell)

    _Dial_ 79:510-14 December 1925. (Waldo Frank)

    _Independent_ 115:302 September 12, 1925. (Ernest Boyd)

    _Literary Digest International Book Review_ 3:805, 808 November
    1925. (William R. Lanfeld)

    _Nation_ 121:626-27 December 2, 1925. (Joseph Wood Krutch)

    _New Republic_ 44:233-34 October 21, 1925. (Robert Morss Lovett)

    _New Statesman_ 27:199 June 5, 1926. (P. C. Kennedy)

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ September 26, 1925,
    p.2. (Walter Yust)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ October 4, 1925, p.1. (Stuart
    P. Sherman)

    _New York Times Book Review_ September 20, 1925, p.9.

    _Outlook_ 141:288 October 21, 1925.

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 4:568 August 1927. (Émile Legouis)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 2:191 October 10, 1925. (Henry
    Seidel Canby)

830. _The modern writer_ (1925)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 63:361 May 1926.

    _Literary Digest International Book Review_ 4:593 August 1926.
    (N. Bryllion Fagin)

    _New York Times Book Review_ January 10, 1926, p.14.

831. _Sherwood Anderson’s notebook_ (1926)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 63:599-600 July 1926 (Will Cuppy)

    _Dial_ 82:74 January 1927.

    _Independent_ 116:751 June 26, 1926.

    _Literary Digest International Book Review_ 4:654-55 September
    1926. (James L. Ford)

    _Nation_ 123:155 August 18, 1926.

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ May 22, 1926, p.3.
    (Walter Yust)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ June 20, 1926, p.7. (Babette
    Deutsch)

    _New York Times Book Review_ May 9, 1926, p.2. (H. I. Brock)

    _New York World_ May 9, 1926, Section M, p.6. (Harry Hansen)

    _Outlook_ 143:420 July 21, 1926.

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 4:85-86 October 1926. (C. Cestre)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 2:933 July 17, 1926. (Arthur
    Colton)

832. _Tar: A Midwest childhood_ (1926)

    _Dial_ 82:256 March 1927.

    _Nation_ 124:121-22 February 2, 1927. (Clifton Fadiman)

    _New Statesman_ 30:330, 332 December 17, 1927.

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ January 22, 1927, p.2.

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ November 21, 1926, p.1.
    (Rebecca West)

    _New York World_ December 5, 1926, Section M, 1926, p.2. (H. S.
    Gorman)

    _New York World_ December 5, 1926, Section M, p.11.

    _Outlook_ 154:60 January 12, 1927.

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 5:400-01 April 1928. (C. Cestre)

    _Saturday Review_ 144:709 November 19, 1927. (L. P. Hartley)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 3:593 February 19, 1927.
    (Arthur Colton)

833. _A new testament_ (1927)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 65:710 August 1927. (John Farrar)

    _Independent_ 118:641 June 18, 1927.

    _New York Evening Post Literary Review_ July 9, 1927, p.8
    (Conrad Aiken)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ July 24, 1927, p.2. (Babette
    Deutsch)

    _New York Times Book Review_ June 12, 1927, p.9.

    _New York World_ June 19, 1927, Section M, p.8. (Harry Hansen)

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 5:580-81 August 1928. (C. Cestre)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 4:85 September 3, 1927. (Hamish
    Miles)

834. _Hello towns!_ (1929)

    _Boston Transcript_ April 27, 1929, p.3. (E. F. Edgett)

    _Nation_ 128:714 June 12, 1929. (William Allen White)

    _New Republic_ 58:365 May 15, 1929. (Geoffrey Hellman)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ May 5, 1929, p.3. (Lewis
    Gannett)

    _New York Times Book Review_ April 28, 1929, p.1. (Percy
    Hutchison)

    _Outlook_ 152:78 May 8, 1929. (Walter R. Brooks)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 5:974 May 4, 1929. (Sara Haardt)

835. _Perhaps women_ (1931)

    _Forum_ 86:vi, viii November 1931.

    _Nation_ 133:401-02 October 14, 1931. (Horace Gregory)

    _New Republic_ 69:24-25 November 18, 1931. (Murray Godwin)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ September 20, 1931, p.5. (Mary
    Ross)

    _New York Times Book Review_ September 27, 1931, p.2. (R. C.
    Feld)

    _Outlook_ 159:184 October 7, 1931 (Harry Salpeter)

    _Revue Anglo-Américaine_ 9:269 February 1932. (C. Cestre)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 8:183 October 10, 1931. (Henry
    Seidel Canby)

    _Survey_ 67:498-99 February 1, 1932. (John C. Nelson)

836. _Beyond desire_ (1932)

    _Bookman_ (N.Y.) 75:642-43 October 1932. (Geoffrey Stone)

    _Journal of Social Forces_ 11:295-98 December 1932. (Harriet L.
    Herring)

    _Mercure de France Année_ 44,t.247:218-20 October 1933. (Jean
    Catel)

    _Nation_ 135:432-33 November 2, 1932. (Clifton Fadiman)

    _New Republic_ 73:168-69 December 21, 1932. (Granville Hicks)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ September 25, 1932, p.7.
    (Margaret C. Dawson)

    _New York Times Book Review_ September 25, 1932, p.6. (John
    Chamberlain)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 9:305 December 10, 1932. (T. K.
    Whipple)

    _Survey_ 68:565 November 1, 1932. (Helen Mears)

    _World Tomorrow_ 15:525-26 November 30, 1932. (Reinhold Niebuhr)

837. _Death in the woods_ (1933)

    _Commonweal_ 18:273 July 7, 1933. (Jerome Mellquist)

    _Nation_ 136:508 May 3, 1933. (William Troy)

    _New Republic_ 75:105-06 June 7, 1933. (T. S. Matthews)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ April 16, 1933, p.4. (F. T.
    Marsh)

    _New York Times Book Review_ April 23, 1933, p.6. (Louis
    Kronenberger)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 9:561 April 29, 1933. (John
    Chamberlain)

838. _Puzzled America_ (1935)

    _American Review_ 5:234-38 May 1935. (Donald Davidson)

    _Atlantic Monthly_ 156(Bookshelf):10 August 1935. (Donald
    MacCampbell)

    _Chicago Daily Tribune_ May 4, 1935, p.14. (Gertrude Stein)

    _Literary Digest_ 119:26 April 6, 1935.

    _Die neueren Sprachen_ 43:576-77 1935. (Hans Effelberger)

    _New Republic_ 82:348 May 1, 1935. (Hamilton Basso)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ March 30, 1935, p.9. (Lewis
    Gannett); April 7, 1935, p.5. (Ernest S. Bates)

    _New York Times Book Review_ April 7, 1935, p.1. (R. L. Duffus)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 11:621 April 13, 1935. (Louis
    Adamic)

839. _Kit Brandon_ (1936)

    _Book Buyer_ n.s.2,no.8:9 Christmas 1936.

    _Commonweal_ 25:109 November 20, 1936. (Geoffrey Stone)

    _Nation_ 143:452-53 October 17, 1936. (Mark Van Doren)

    _New Republic_ 88:318 October 21, 1936. (Hamilton Basso)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ October 11, 1936, p.1. (Alfred
    Kazin)

    _New York Times Book Review_ October 11, 1936, p.3. (Stanley
    Young)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 14:13 October 10, 1936. (Howard
    Mumford Jones)

    _Time_ 28:87 October 12, 1936.

840. _Plays, Winesburg and others_ (1937)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ October 31, 1937, p.22. (W. P.
    Eaton)

    _New York Times Book Review_ November 14, 1937, p.9. (P. M.
    Jack)

    _Theatre Arts Monthly_ 21:824-25 October 1937.

841. _Home town_ (1940)

    _Atlantic Monthly_ 166:unpaged section December 1940.

    _Boston Transcript_ October 23, 1940, p.11. (Lewis Gannett)

    _Commonweal_ 33:233 December 20, 1940. (John C. Cort)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ October 27, 1940, p.5. (R. F.
    Crandell)

    _New York Times Book Review_ October 27, 1940, p.1. (R. L.
    Duffus)

    _New Yorker_ 16:87 November 2, 1940.

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 23:21 January 11, 1941. (Henry
    Seidel Canby)

    _Survey Graphic_ 29:635, 637 December 1940. (Florence L.
    Kellogg)

    _Time_ 36:60-61 October 28, 1940.

842. _Sherwood Anderson’s memoirs_ (1942)

    _Atlantic Monthly_ 169:unpaged section May 1942. (Edward Weeks)

    _Commonweal_ 36:19-20 April 24, 1942. (J. K. Paulding)

    _Nation_ 154:574 May 16, 1942. (Margaret Marshall)

    _New Republic_ 106:548-49 April 20, 1942. (Max Gissen)

    _New York Herald Tribune Books_ April 12, 1942, p.1-2. (Floyd
    Dell)

    _New York Times Book Review_ April 12, 1942, p.3. (R. L. Duffus)

    _New Yorker_ 18:87 April 11, 1942.

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 25:5-6 April 11, 1942. (Harry
    Hansen)

    _Time_ 39:90 April 20, 1942.

    _Yale Review_ n.s.32:183-85 Autumn 1942. (Maxwell Geismar)

843. _Sherwood Anderson reader_ (1947)

    _American Literature_ 20:73-74 March 1948. (Frederick J.
    Hoffman)

    _Nation_ 166:20 January 3, 1948. (F. W. Dupee)

    _New York Herald Tribune Weekly Book Review_ November 9, 1947,
    p.1-2. (Malcolm Cowley)

    _New York Times Book Review_ November 9, 1947, p.1, 67-69.
    (Lionel Trilling)

    _Partisan Review_ 15:492-99 April 1948. (Irving Howe)

    _Personalist_ 29:426-27 October 1948. (Lionel Stevenson)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 30:52 December 6, 1947.
    (Robeson Bailey)

844. _Portable Sherwood Anderson_ (1949)

    _New Republic_ 121:18-19 August 15, 1949. (Alexander Klein)

    _Saturday Review of Literature_ 32:40 April 23, 1949. (Ben Ray
    Redman)

    _Time_ 53:96, 98, 100 February 28, 1949.

845. _Letters of Sherwood Anderson_ (1953)

    _Arizona Quarterly_ 9:357-59 Winter 1953. (Bernard Raymund)

    _Nation_ 176:526-28 June 20, 1953. (Willard Thorp)

    _New Republic_ 128:19-20 June 22, 1953. (Perry Miller)

    _Partisan Review_ 20:690-92 November 1953. (Elizabeth Hardwick)

    _Reporter_ 8:38-39 June 23, 1953. (Gouverneur Paulding)

    _Saturday Review_ 36:20 June 20, 1953. (Brom Weber)

    _Southwest Review_ 38:xiv-xv, 350 Autumn 1953. (John T.
    Flanagan)




_INDEX_

References to titles listed alphabetically in “Contributions to
Periodicals” and “Contributions to the Smyth County News” are not
included in the index.


  Aaron, Manley, 483

  Adamic, Louis, 838

  Adams, James D., 485

  Adams, Mildred, 486

  Adler, Elmer, 278

  “Adventure”, 763

  “After seeing George Bellows’ Mr. and Mrs. Wase”, 157

  Aiken, Conrad, 487, 833

  Alcántara, Mario G., 42

  Alexander, David C., 488

  Alfaro, Julio C., 16

  “Alice”, 110

  _Alice and the lost novel_, 44

  Almy, Robert F., 489

  Amado, James, 12

  _American county fair, The_, 48

  _American Spectator_, 391

  Anderson, Elizabeth, 39

  Anderson, Emma S., 9

  Anderson, John, 17, 89

  Anderson, Karl J., 491

  Anderson, Margaret, 303, 492

  Anderson, Marion M., 7

  Anderson, Robert, 17

  Anderson, Tennessee Mitchell, 13, 17

  Arvin, Newton, 495, 826

  Ashley, Schuyler, 496-97

  Asselineau, Roger, 498


  Bailey, Robeson, 843

  Baldini, G., 24

  Baldwin, Charles C., 499

  Barberá, Manuel, 51

  Barker, Russell H., 500

  Basso, Hamilton, 838-39

  Bates, Ernest S., 838

  Beach, Joseph W., 501

  Beach, Sylvia, 502

  Benchley, Robert C., 824

  Benét, William R., 503, 705, 825, 828

  Berg, Ruben G., 504

  Berland, Alwyn, 505

  Berti, Luigi, 506

  _Beyond desire_, 50-51, 836

  Birney, Earle, 507

  Bishop, John P., 357, 508-09

  Blanck, Jacob, 641

  Bland, Winifred, 510

  Blankenship, Russell, 511

  Bodenheim, Maxwell, 512-13

  Bonsanti, Marcella, 58

  Boussinesq, Hélène, 149

  Boyd, Ernest, 11-12, 391, 829

  Boyd, James, 514

  Boynton, H. W., 820-21, 823, 827

  Boynton, Percy H., 515

  Braak, Menno ter, 516

  Bredsdorff, Elias, 12

  Brickell, Herschel, 829

  Brinnin, Malcolm, 517

  Brock, H. I., 831

  Bromfield, Louis, 828

  Brooks, Cleanth, 518, 744

  Brooks, Van Wyck, 91, 519-20, 803

  Brooks, Walter R., 834

  Brossard, Chandler, 521

  “Brother death”, 611, 620

  Broun, Heywood, 825, 827

  Brown, John, 522

  Bruno, Francesco, 523

  Bruns, Friedrich, 524

  Buchanan, Annabel M., 525

  “Buck Fever”, 431-82, 724

  Budd, Louis J., 526

  Burrow, Trigant, 527


  Cabell, James Branch, 391

  Calverton, V. F., 85, 361, 529

  Canby, Henry S., 530-31, 827, 829, 835, 841

  Cargill, Oscar, 532

  Carmer, Carl, 284

  Carr, Edward F., 533

  Carson, Saul, 534

  Catel, Jean, 836

  Centeno, Augusto, 36, 72

  Cestre, C., 828, 831-33, 835

  Chamberlain, John, 836-37

  Chapman, Arnold, 535

  Chase, Cleveland B., 536-37, 789

  “Chicago hamlet, A”, 115

  Cleaton, Allen, 538

  Cleaton, Irene, 538

  Cohen, Elliot E., 372

  Collins, Joseph, 539-40, 826

  Colton, Arthur, 831-32

  Colum, Mary M., 825

  _Commercial Democracy_, 392

  Conkling, Grace H., 822

  Copenhaver, Laura Lou, 53

  Cort, John C., 841

  Coster, Dirk, 541

  Cowley, Malcolm, 542, 843

  Crandell, R. F., 841

  Crane, Hart, 543

  Crane, Stephen, 76

  Crawford, Nelson A., 544

  Cuppy, Will, 831


  Dahlberg, Stina, 16

  _Dark laughter_, 33-36, 496, 718, 778, 829

  Daugherty, George H., 546

  Davenport, Kenneth, 547

  Davidson, Donald, 838

  Dawson, Margaret C., 836

  _Death in the woods_, 52, 510, 792, 837

  De Dominicis, Anna M., 548

  Dell, Floyd, 549-50, 842

  Deutsch, Babette, 831, 833

  Dickinson, L. R., 551

  Dickman, Max, 12

  Dinamov, S., 32, 51

  Dinsmoor, Mary H., 552

  Doberhoff, Lili, 16

  Donlin, George B., 821

  Dos Passos, John, 557

  _Double Dealer_, 248

  Dreiser, Theodore, 21, 77, 89, 154, 324, 391, 493, 516, 553-54, 583,
        595, 640, 676, 689

  Duffey, Bernard, 555

  Duffus, R. L., 838, 841-42

  Dupee, F. W., 843


  Eaton, W. P., 840

  Echávarri, Luis, 32

  Eck, Waldie van, 58

  Edgar, Pelham, 557

  Edgett, E. F., 834

  Effelberger, Hans, 838

  Emmett, Burton, 45, 118

  Emmett, Mary P., 55

  “Epilogue”, 131

  Eschelmüller, Valerie, 558

  Esherick, Wharton, 435

  Ewald, Tom, 45

  _Exhibition of paintings by Alfred H. Maurer, An_, 28


  Fadiman, Clifton, 560, 832, 836

  Fagin, Nathan B., 561-64, 830

  Farrar, John, 825, 833

  Farrell, James T., 565

  Faulkner, William, 557, 566-67, 787, 817

  Fay, Bernard, 24, 357, 568-70

  Feld, R. C., 835

  Feldman, Eugene, 571-72

  Fenton, Charles A., 573

  Ferres, John H., 574

  Fischer, Walter, 829

  Flanagan, John T., 575-76, 845

  Flores, Angel, 16

  Fontanet, Georges, 577

  Ford, Corey, 812

  Ford, Ford Madox, 203

  Ford, James L., 831

  Forer, Valeria, 578

  Frank, Waldo, 69, 372, 579-82, 703, 829

  Franulic, Lenka, 188, 583

  Fredenthal, D., 804

  Free Company, 92

  Freitag, George, 87

  Freud, Sigmund, 617, 624-25, 692

  Friend, Julius W., 584


  Gál, Andor, 42

  Galantière, Lewis, 585

  Gallup, Donald, 90

  Gannett, Lewis, 834, 838, 841

  Gannon, John I., 47

  Garnett, Edward, 586

  Gay, Marguerite, 12, 20, 24, 42, 263, 522

  Geismar, Maxwell D., 587-88, 842

  Gelfant, Blanche H., 589

  Genty, Paul, 42

  George, Henry, 315

  Gerould, Katharine F., 590

  Gershom, Eric, 824

  Gilman, Lawrence, 825

  Giovanola, Luigi, 27

  Gissen, Max, 842

  Godwin, Murray, 835

  Gold, Herbert, 591

  Gómez de la Mata, Germán, 12

  Gorfinkel, D. M., 32

  Gorman, Herbert S., 828, 832

  Gould, Gerald, 827

  Gozzi, Raymond D., 593-94

  Grabhorn Press, 37, 47

  Grana, Gianni, 595

  Green, Elizabeth L., 596

  Green, Paul, 596

  Gregory, Alyse, 597, 826

  Gregory, Horace, 66, 835

  Grillo, Giuseppe, 598

  Gronna, Anne T. M., 599

  Gruening, Ernest H., 73

  Guido, Augusto, 600


  Haardt, Sara, 834

  Hackett, Francis, 601-02, 820-21, 824

  Halleck, Reuben P., 603

  Hannau, Marcella, 65

  Hansen, Harry, 604-05, 828, 831, 833, 842

  Hardwick, Elizabeth, 845

  _Harlan miners speak_, 71

  Hart, Robert C., 606

  Hartley, L. P., 832

  Hartley, Marsden, 607

  Hartwick, Harry, 608

  Hatcher, Harlan H., 609

  Haught, Viva E., 610

  Havighurst, Walter, 611

  Hawthorne, Hildegarde, 825

  Hazard, Lucy L., 612

  Hecht, Ben, 614-15

  Heiberg, Hans, 36

  Hellesnes, Nils, 616

  Hellman, Geoffrey, 834

  _Hello towns!_, 45-46, 798, 834

  Hemingway, Ernest, 557, 573, 575, 787, 791, 828

  Henderson, A. C., 822

  Hepburn, James G., 617

  Herbst, Josephine, 618

  Hergesheimer, Joseph, 586

  Herring, Harriet L., 836

  Herrmann, Eva, 334

  Hicks, Granville, 619, 836

  Hilton, Earl R., 620-22

  Hind, Charles L., 623

  Hoffman, Frederick J., 624-27, 843

  _Home town_, 61, 841

  Hoover, Herbert, 210

  _Horses and men_, 21-24, 495, 826

  Howe, Irving, 629-34, 759, 843

  Huddleston, Sisley, 635

  Huebsch, Benjamin W., 636

  Hughes, Langston, 284

  Hutchinson, Eugene, 17

  Hutchinson, Percy, 834


  “I want to know why”, 518, 657, 744

  Iijima Yoshihide, 36

  Izzo, Carlo, 638


  Jack, P. M., 840

  Jansen, Roy, 87

  “Jasper Deeter”, 176

  Jessup, Mary E., 639

  Johnson, A. Theodore, 640

  Johnson, Merle D., 641

  Jolas, Eugène, 20, 24, 78

  Jonason, Olov, 12, 65

  Jones, Howard Mumford, 68, 87, 642, 839

  Jones, William, 372

  Jovanović, Slobodan A., 12

  “Justice”, 366


  Kalantzi, B., 16

  Karsner, David, 643

  Kaufman, Wolfe, 644

  Kazin, Alfred, 645-46, 839

  Kellogg, Arthur, 828

  Kellogg, Florence L., 841

  Kennedy, P. C., 829

  “King coal”, 241

  Kintner, Evelyn, 647

  Kirchwey, Freda, 648

  _Kit Brandon_, 55-58, 741, 784, 839

  Klein, Alexander, 844

  Komroff, Manuel, 649

  Kondrysová, Eva, 12

  Kovalenskaya, M., 24

  Kozlenko, William, 95

  Kranendonk, Anthonius, 650

  Kreymborg, Alfred, 70, 74

  Kronenberger, Louis, 837

  Krutch, Joseph W., 651, 829

  Krzyszton, Jerzy, 12

  Kunitz, Stanley, 652-53


  Lalou, René, 42, 823

  Lanfeld, William R., 829

  Lange, Per, 36

  Lankes, Julius J., 49, 198

  Lardner, Ring, 166, 230

  Larsen, Henrik, 12

  Lavretski, V., 6

  Lawrence, D. H., 213, 225-26, 509, 617, 632

  Lawry, Jon S., 654

  Legouis, Émile, 829

  Leitich, Albert, 655

  Lennartz, Franz, 656

  Lerbs, Karl, 16, 20, 32

  Lesser, Simon O., 657

  _Letters of Sherwood Anderson_, 68, 845

  LeVerrier, Charles, 658, 752

  Levidov, M., 12

  Levinson, Andrei I., 659

  Lewis, Sinclair, 166, 640, 660, 676, 782

  Lewis, Wyndham, 661

  Lewisohn, Ludwig, 662, 827

  Liben, Meyer, 663

  “Like a queen”, 110

  Lindsay, Vachel, 207, 555

  Littell, Robert, 826-27

  Llona, Victor, 32, 568

  Loggins, Vernon, 666

  London, Jack, 791

  Long, Maurice, 49

  Lovett, Robert Morss, 86, 668-71, 824-25, 828-29

  Lowrey, Burling H., 672

  Luccock, Halford E., 673

  Lundkvist, Artur, 65, 674-76


  MacCampbell, Donald, 838

  McCole, Camille J., 677

  MacDonald, Dwight, 678

  McIntyre, Ralph E., 679

  McKee, Philip, 79

  MacLeish, Archibald, 829

  McNicol, Elinore C., 680

  Madrid, Francisco, 63

  Mahoney, John J., 681

  Maillard, Denyse, 682

  Mainsard, Joseph, 683

  Mais, Stuart P., 684

  Mallea, Eduardo, 535

  Maltz, Albert, 81, 84

  _Many marriages_, 25-27, 490, 531, 658, 802, 827

  Marble, Annie R., 685

  _Marching men_, 4-6, 821

  _Marion Democrat_, 393

  Markey, Gene, 813

  Marsh, F. T., 837

  Marshall, Margaret, 683, 842

  Mason, Franklin, 687

  Masters, Edgar Lee, 207

  Mather, Frank J., 688

  Matthews, T. S., 837

  Matthiessen, Francis O., 689

  Matveyev, S. D., 12

  Maurer, Alfred H., 28

  Mears, Helen, 836

  Mellquist, Jerome, 86, 837

  Mencken, Henry L., 690

  Michaud, Régis, 691-93

  _Mid-American chants_, 7-8, 822

  Miles, Hamish, 833

  “Milk bottles”, 381

  Miller, Henry, 695

  Miller, Perry, 845

  Millett, Fred B., 696

  Mitchell, Tennessee, _see_ Anderson, Tennessee Mitchell

  Miyazaki, Yoshizô, 20, 24

  _Modern writer, The_, 37, 830

  More, Paul E., 697

  Morris, Lawrence S., 698

  Morris, Lloyd R., 699

  Moses, William R., 700

  Mueller, Frances H., 701


  Nathan, George J., 391

  _Nearer the grass roots_, 47

  Nelson, John C., 835

  Nemi, Orsola, 12

  _New Testament, A_, 43, 833

  Newberry Library Anderson Collection, 494, 753

  Niebuhr, Reinhold, 836

  “Night in a corn town”, 323

  _No swank_, 53

  Nossack, Hans Erich, 12

  “Notes for newspaper readers”, 277

  Nuhn, Ferner, 702


  O’Brien, Edward J., 703

  Ohashi, Kichinosuke, 19

  Okhrimenko, P., 12, 20, 51

  Olivet College, 60

  “Olsonville”, 267

  O’Neil, Raymond, 96

  O’Neill, Eugene, 391

  Osterling, Anders, 36

  O’Sullivan, Vincent, 704


  Paleólogo, Constantino, 12

  Panhuijsen, J., 706

  Pargellis, Stanley, 707

  Parrington, Vernon, 708

  Patchen, Kenneth, 814

  Pattee, Fred L., 709

  Paulding, Gouverneur, 845

  Paulding, J. K., 842

  Pavese, Cesare, 36, 710-11

  Pearson, Norman H., 705, 712

  _Perhaps women_, 49, 835

  Phelps, William L., 820

  Phillips, William L., 713-16

  Pivano, Fernanda, 32

  _Plays, Winesburg and others_, 59, 840

  “Please let me explain”, 288

  Poe, Edgar Allan, 761

  _Poor White_, 13-16, 401, 793, 824

  Poppe, Hans W., 717

  _Portable Sherwood Anderson, The_, 66-67, 844

  Prall, Jane W., 33

  Praz, Mario, 718

  Prospero, Ada, 12

  _Puzzled America_, 54, 838


  Quilico, Luisella, 16

  Quinn, Arthur H., 719


  Rascoe, Burton, 720-21, 826-27

  Raspillaire, Jeanne H., 722

  Raymund, Bernard, 723, 845

  Redman, Ben Ray, 844

  Restrup, Ole, 51

  Reunanen, Leena-Maija, 12

  “Revolt in South Dakota”, 367

  Rideout, Walter B., 724

  Ringe, Donald A., 725

  Rivière, Jean, 24

  Rocher, Marguerite, 826

  Romanova, E., 32

  Rorty, James, 372

  Ros, Armando, 12

  Rosenfeld, Paul, 25, 64, 86, 166, 726-29

  Roskolenko, Harry, 815-16

  Ross, Mary, 835

  Rossi, Sergio, 731

  Rosskam, Edwin, 61

  Rourke, Constance M., 824

  Russell, Bertrand, 218, 484, 743


  Salpeter, Harry, 835

  Sandburg, Carl, 130, 555, 610

  Sanderson, Arthur M., 732

  Santangelo, Guglielmo, 20

  Saroyan, William, 733

  Sarvig, Ole, 27

  Schaik-Willing, Jeanne van, 734

  Schevill, Ferdinand, 52, 88

  Schevill, James, 735, 759

  Schiffman, Joseph, 736

  Schloss, George, 737

  Schweinitz, Maria von, 46

  Schyberg, Frederik, 738

  Scott, C. Kay, 824

  Sergel, Christopher, 93, 97, 739

  Sergel, Roger, 54, 740-41

  Shaw, Lloyd, 80

  Sherbo, Arthur, 744

  Sherman, Stuart P., 745, 829

  _Sherwood Anderson reader, The_, 64-65, 843

  _Sherwood Anderson’s memoirs_, 62-63, 686, 842

  _Sherwood Anderson’s notebook_, 38, 831

  Shipman, Evan, 177

  Shönemann, Friedrich, 824

  Sillen, Samuel, 756

  Sinclair, Upton, 757

  Sklar, George, 81, 84

  Smeding, H. J., 16

  Smith, Henry N., 759

  Smith, Rachel, 760

  Smith, Sarah F., 761

  _Smyth County News_, 394-482, 551

  Southworth Press, 48

  Spiller, Robert E., 664

  Spratling, William P., 817

  Sprigge, Elizabeth, 726

  Stegner, Wallace, 763

  Stein, Gertrude, 90, 166, 170-71, 517, 762, 764-66, 828, 838

  Steinbeck, John, 791

  Stephenson, Nathaniel W., 111

  Stevenson, Lionel, 843

  Stevns, Arne, 58

  Stieglitz, Alfred, 29, 69, 75, 101

  Stone, Geoffrey, 836, 839

  Stone, Percy N., 827

  _Story teller’s story, A_, 29-32, 503, 539, 655, 660, 828

  Sutton, William A., 767-71

  Swanson, Gloria, 98


  Takigawa, Motoo, 772

  Taniguchi, Rikuo, 20, 24

  _Tar: A Midwest childhood_, 39-42, 497, 832

  Taylor, Walter F., 773

  Taylor, William E., 774

  “They elected him”, 390

  “Thinker, A”, 250

  Thorp, Willard, 845

  Thurston, Jarvis A., 775-76

  Toksvig, Harald, 9

  Trevisani, Giuseppe, 12

  Trilling, Lionel, 777, 843

  _Triumph of the egg, The_, 17-20, 751, 755, 793, 825

  _Triumph of the egg, The_ (drama), 96

  Trolle, Elsa af, 36

  Troy, William, 837

  Tugwell, Rexford G., 175, 778


  Untermeyer, Louis, 779, 822


  Van Doren, Carl, 780-83

  Van Doren, Mark, 783-84, 839

  Volosov, Mark, 6, 24


  Wagenknecht, Edward C., 785

  Walcutt, Charles C., 786

  Walker, Don D., 787

  Walsh, Thomas, 822

  “War”, 341

  Ward, Christopher, 818

  Warren, C. Henry, 788

  Warren, Robert P., 518, 744, 789

  Wase, Philip, 157

  Weaver, Raymond W., 819

  Webb, Doris, 821

  Weber, Brom, 790, 845

  Weeks, Edward, 842

  Weltz, Friedrich, 791

  Werneck de Castro, Moacir, 12

  West, Ray B., 792

  West, Rebecca, 559, 793-94, 832

  Westgate Press, 47

  Wharton, Edith, 589

  Whipple, Thomas K., 795-97, 836

  White, William A., 798, 834

  Whitman, Walt, 82, 610

  Wickham, Harvey, 799

  Wiese, Lucie, 86

  Wilde, Percival, 94

  “Will you sell your newspapers?”, 191

  Wilson, Edmund, 800-03, 827

  _Windy McPherson’s son_, 1-3, 820

  _Winesburg, Ohio_, 9-12, 498, 522, 582, 587, 591, 629, 681, 713-14,
        716, 739, 776, 791, 804, 823

  _Winesburg, Ohio_ (drama), 97

  Winther, S. K., 805

  Wolfe, Thomas, 526, 589, 806

  Woolf, Virginia, 807

  _Writer’s conception of realism_, 60


  Young, Stanley, 839

  Young, Stark, 809-10

  Yust, Walter, 828-29, 831


  Zardoya, Concha, 811


*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHERWOOD ANDERSON: A
BIBLIOGRAPHY ***

Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
be renamed.

Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
United States without permission and without paying copyright
royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
Gutenberg™ electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG™
concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
license, especially commercial redistribution.

START: FULL LICENSE

THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK

To protect the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project
Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
Project Gutenberg™ License available with this file or online at
www.gutenberg.org/license.

Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
Gutenberg™ electronic works

1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg™
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in your
possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
Project Gutenberg™ electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
1.E.8.

1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg™ electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg™ electronic works if you follow the terms of this
agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg™
electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.

1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the
Foundation” or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works. Nearly all the individual
works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
that you will support the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting
free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg™
works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
Project Gutenberg™ name associated with the work. You can easily
comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg™ License when
you share it without charge with others.

1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
other Project Gutenberg™ work. The Foundation makes no
representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
country other than the United States.

1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:

1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg™ License must appear
prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg™ work (any work
on which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the
phrase “Project Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed,
performed, viewed, copied or distributed:

  This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
  most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
  restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
  under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
  eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
  United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
  you are located before using this eBook.

1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is
derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase “Project
Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg™
trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
will be linked to the Project Gutenberg™ License for all works
posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
beginning of this work.

1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg™
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg™.

1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg™ License.

1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg™ work in a format
other than “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official
version posted on the official Project Gutenberg™ website
(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original “Plain
Vanilla ASCII” or other form. Any alternate format must include the
full Project Gutenberg™ License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.

1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg™ works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works
provided that:

• You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
  the use of Project Gutenberg™ works calculated using the method
  you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
  to the owner of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark, but he has
  agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
  Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
  within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
  legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
  payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
  Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
  Section 4, “Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
  Literary Archive Foundation.”

• You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
  you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
  does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg™
  License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
  copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
  all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg™
  works.

• You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
  any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
  electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
  receipt of the work.

• You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
  distribution of Project Gutenberg™ works.

1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
Gutenberg™ electronic work or group of works on different terms than
are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
the Project Gutenberg™ trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
forth in Section 3 below.

1.F.

1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
Gutenberg™ collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg™
electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
contain “Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
cannot be read by your equipment.

1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right
of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg™ trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg™ electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.

1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
without further opportunities to fix the problem.

1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you “AS-IS”, WITH NO
OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.

1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
remaining provisions.

1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in
accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg™
electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
or any Project Gutenberg™ work, (b) alteration, modification, or
additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg™ work, and (c) any
Defect you cause.

Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg™

Project Gutenberg™ is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
from people in all walks of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg™'s
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg™ collection will
remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg™ and future
generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
www.gutenberg.org

Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation

The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact

Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation

Project Gutenberg™ depends upon and cannot survive without
widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate

Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg™ electronic works

Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
Gutenberg™ concept of a library of electronic works that could be
freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
distributed Project Gutenberg™ eBooks with only a loose network of
volunteer support.

Project Gutenberg™ eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
edition.

Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
facility: www.gutenberg.org

This website includes information about Project Gutenberg™,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.