Alexandria H-I
Hardy, Thomas (1840-1928)
- Thomas Hardy
Society of North America
This is a good site for scholarly
research. It has an on-line journal, bibliographies of his work, excerpts
from biographies, and so forth. Some of its internal links don't work too
well, but other than that it's a pretty good site.
-
David Kinkead's Thomas Hardy Home Page
This is a lovely collection
of links to on-line resources, well-organized as to biographies, works,
criticism, pictures, and events. This is a good place to start for any
research, especially for wide-ranging papers and projects which will cover
more than just a single book.
- Mark Simon's
Thomas Hardy page
This is an extremely complete site, with a
biography, critical articles, a genealogy, maps, pictures, and links to
e-texts. It even includes reviews of his works and his recipe for ale.
Who could ask for anything more?
- Thomas Hardy's
world
This is a nicely done site with a biography, a bibliography,
articles about Hardy's relationship to the land, and a very nice section
about the cultural background which Hardy wrote against and which
influenced his writing. There are lots of nice picture s, most of them
linked into the timeline of his life or the description of his works,
rather than collected separately. This is a very attractive site, even
though it contains a little less critical work than some of the others.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel (1804-1864)
- Eric Eldred's
page
This is a very complete site with e-texts, lots of biographic
material, criticism, illustrations, a bibliography, and even an FAQ.
Extremely well-annotated, the site has hints on the best use of its
information. Selected as one of the Top 20 Humanities sites on the web by
EdSITEment. Read the access restrictions before proceeding through the
site.
Most of the other stuff out there seems to be specifically for
the Scarlet Letter, but Eric's site is really sufficient for most needs.
H.D. (Hilda Doolittle)(1886-1961) - H.D. Home Page
This page
has a biography, a bibliography, and a list of upcoming events. It
includes some interesting links, but there isn't a lot of critical
information either there or linked. However, there is some listed in the
bibliography section.
Hemingway, Ernest (1899-1961)
- David Gagne's
Hemingway page
This site includes the Hemingway collection, which
lists the works and on-line essays relating to them. It contains links to
the Hemingway Workbook, which tells about the author's life. There are
lots of links to quote pages. It also includes a timelin e of his life.
- Papa
Page
This is a nice collection of links and information. Most of
the information is biographical; it also has a large collection of
pictures. The page contains links to other sites of interest to Hemingway
scholars, such as a bullfighting site and some of th e newspapers at which
the author worked. There's not too much critical info on the author,
though.
Hopkins, Gerard Manley (1844-1889)
- The Gerard Manley
Hopkins Webpage
This page contains links to e-texts, societies,
biographical information (some of which are online texts of books), links,
and critical essays and works. A good place to start.
- Also check the Victorian
Web entry. (See under General Sites for more information about the
Victorian Web).
Hurston, Zora Neale (1891-1960)
Irving, Washington (1783-1859)
- I could find no general
sites on the author's works. Instead, I found one interesting site about
Rip Van Winkle and the historical background which is present in the
story's subtext: Rip Van Winkle: Past
and Present.
Robin Whitley
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