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Notes on Contributors
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

Notes on Contributors

John Frederick Nims has written three books of poetry, a translation of the poems of St. John of the Cross, and a translation of Euripides' Andromache. His latest volume of poetry is forthcoming, as well as an anthology of English lyric poetry published by Macmillan.

Allan Stevenson, after dating the Missale speciale and the Netherlandish Blockbooks, is now preparing a book on Caxton's Paper and Print as holder of a grant by the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia.

Robert K. Turner, Jr. is Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. With George Walton Williams, he has recently edited 2 and 3 Henry VI for the Pelican Shakespeare.

T. C. Duncan Eaves and Ben D. Kimpel, English professors at the University of Arkansas, are at work on a biography of Samuel Richardson.

Patricia Hernlund, who received her doctorate from the University of Chicago, is Assistant Professor of English at Wayne State University. She is currently completing additional studies of Strahan's registers.

Joan Stevens, Associate Professor of English in Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, is studying Thackeray, Dickens, and New Zealand literature.

Dale Kramer has written a number of articles on Victorian literature and is beginning a study of Charles Maturin. He is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Illinois.

John Firth, who received his doctorate from the University of Virginia and now teaches at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, is working on a study of major Irish autobiographical writings.

Emily K. Izsak, Assistant Professor of English, Boston University, is studying more of Faulkner's manuscripts and has completed a paper on Rémy de Gourmont and twentieth-century American literature.

G. Thomas Tanselle's indefatigable researches are currently in the bibliography of Melville. Associate Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin, he is one of the editors of the forthcoming works of Herman Melville to be published by the Newberry Library and the Northwestern University Press.


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William S. Kable, Assistant Professor of English at the University of South Carolina, is preparing a comprehensive study of compositor B's role in the Pavier Quartos that he began as a doctoral dissertation at the University of Virginia.

G. Blakemore Evans is Professor of English at the University of Illinois (Urbana). He is editor of Shakespearean Prompt-Books of the Seventeenth Century, the fourth volume of which, the Smock Alley Hamlet, has just been published by the University Press of Virginia.

Sister Jean Carmel Cavanaugh, S. L., who teaches at Webster College, St. Louis, has written learned articles on Elizabethan literature.

C. G. Martin, Lecturer in English at Bedford College, University of London, is preparing an edition of Coleridge's poems for Longman's Annotated English Classics.

Matthew J. Bruccoli, professor of English in Ohio State University, continues his investigations of the bibliography of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American authors.

Daniel R. Barnes, a graduate student at the University of Kentucky, has written a number of articles on American writers.

George Monteiro's Henry James and John Hay: The Record of a Friendship was published by the Brown University Press in 1965. He is Assistant Professor of English at Brown University.

George W. Hallam, Associate Professor of English at Jacksonville University, is currently at work on Sir Philip Sidney and the Ramist tradition.

James Kraft teaches English at the University of Virginia and is completing a study of the tales of Henry James.

Derek A. Clarke is Librarian of the British Library of Political and Economic Science at the London School of Economics.

Howell J. Heaney is Bibliographer in the Rare Book Department of the Free Library of Philadelphia.