The "Supremest of Yankee Critics": Harold Stearns, the Young Intellectuals, and America's Discontents.Published in:University of Toronto Quarterly, 2013, v. 82, n. 1, p. 20, doi. 10.1353/utq.2013.0001By:Muller, AdamPublication type:Article
Thomas Wolfe's Passage to England: A Ghostly Account of a Real Voyage.Published in:2017By:BRANCALEONI, MAURIZIOPublication type:Literary Criticism
From Life to Literature: The Historical Foundation of The Party at Jack's.Published in:2017By:DAWSON, JONPublication type:Literary Criticism
"Lost and found, lost and found": Remembering Thomas Wolfe and My Father.Published in:2015By:DOLL, MARY ASWELLPublication type:Essay
A First Edition That Isn't, Exactly: An Addendum to Carol Johnston's Bibliographical Entries on Thomas Wolfe's From Death to Morning.Published in:2014By:BAILEY, J. TODDPublication type:Essay
Thomas Wolfe's Expressionism and The Party at Jack's.Published in:2013By:RADAVICH, DAVIDPublication type:Literary Criticism
The Harmony of the Apollonian and Dionysian Aesthetics in Thomas Wolfe and in the Visual Responses of Douglas W. Gorsline and Harvey Harris.Published in:2012By:Nealis, DylanPublication type:Essay
"Looking for the god in Brooklyn": The Romantic Affinities of Thomas Wolfe and Hart Crane.Published in:2012By:Albernaz, JosephPublication type:Essay
Reconciliation of Opposites: Excess and Deprivation in Thomas Wolfe's "Look Homeward, Angel."Published in:2012By:Rohan, Joanne JoyPublication type:Literary Criticism
Thomas Wolfe, "Return," and the "Asheville" Citizen.Published in:2012By:Canada, MarkPublication type:Essay
"You Can't Go Home Again": Thomas Wolfe's Vision of America.Published in:2012By:Madden, DavidPublication type:Literary Criticism
The Legacy of Thomas Wolfe in Contemporary Appalachian Fiction: Four Recent North Carolina Novels.Published in:2012By:Hovis, GeorgePublication type:Essay
More than a Means to an End: The Train as the Locus of Human Interaction in the Fiction of Thomas Wolfe.Published in:2012By:Bentz, JosephPublication type:Essay
Jonathan Daniels and the "Poet of the Boom."Published in:2012By:Yoder, Jr., Edwin M.Publication type:Essay
"A Stone, a Leaf, a Door": The Narrative Poetics of Thomas Wolfe.Published in:2011By:Radavich, DavidPublication type:Literary Criticism
A Cosmos of His Own: Loss, Ghosts, and Loneliness in Thomas Wolfe's Fiction.Published in:2011By:Préher, GéraldPublication type:Literary Criticism
Wolfe's Racism Revisited: A Response to Robert H. Brinkmeyer Jr.Published in:2010By:Hovis, GeorgePublication type:Literary Criticism
Bright Engines of Life: Trains and the Railroad in Thomas Wolfe's "The Web and the Rock."Published in:2010By:Kolb, JenniferPublication type:Literary Criticism
"A flash of fire": Illness and the Body in Look Homeward, Angel.Published in:2010By:Eckard, Paula GallantPublication type:Literary Criticism
Artists and Stereotypes: Thomas Wolfe's Acquaintance with Clifford Odets.Published in:2010By:Holliday, ShawnPublication type:Essay
Wolfe's "Drug Store": Theme and Variation in "The Hound of Darkness."Published in:2010By:Moisy, AméliePublication type:Literary Criticism
Thomas Wolfe's Greenville/Eugene Gant's Blackstone.Published in:2010By:Bainbridge, JudithPublication type:Essay
Thomas Wolfe's 1918 Flu Story: The Death of Ben in the Context of Other Literary Narratives of the Pandemic.Published in:2009By:Ware, Ruth WinchesterPublication type:Literary Criticism
Thomas Wolfe and Germany: Modernism and Anti-Anti-Semitism in "Dark in the Forest, Strange as Time" and "I Have a Thing to Tell You."Published in:2009By:Meindl, DieterPublication type:Literary Criticism
Beyond the Lost Generation: The Death of Egotism in "You Can't Go Home Again."Published in:2009By:Hovis, GeorgePublication type:Literary Criticism
"You Can't Go Home Again": Does Nazism Really Transform Wolfe's Romanticism?Published in:2009By:Godwin, RebeccaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Look Outward, Thomas: Social Criticism as Unifying Element in "You Can't Go Home Again."Published in:2009By:Dawson, JonPublication type:Literary Criticism
Narrative, Work, and Grief in Thomas Wolfe's "The Lost Boy."Published in:2008By:Eckard, Paula GallantPublication type:Literary Criticism
Adrift in the "Life Sargassic": The Case of "Look Homeward, Angel."Published in:2007By:Latimer, DanPublication type:Literary Criticism
Mother vs. Daughter: The Relationship between Eliza and Helen in "Look Homeward, Angel."Published in:2007By:Crowder, ElizabethPublication type:Literary Criticism
"It was like a dream of hell": Gantian Dreams Deferred.Published in:2007By:Kerns, AllisonPublication type:Essay
And the Soul Shall Dance: Thomas Wolfe's Influence on Wakako Yamauchi.Published in:2007By:Holliday, ShawnPublication type:Literary Criticism
Journey to the Interior: The Influence of Xenophon's "Anabasis" on Thomas Wolfe's "O Lost."Published in:2007By:Kerr, LisaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Horace Kephart and Thomas Wolfe's "Abomination," "Look Homeward, Angel."Published in:2006By:Mitchell, TedPublication type:Literary Criticism
Why Thomas Wolfe Is a "Crate" American Novelist.Published in:2006By:Bentz, JosephPublication type:Literary Criticism
Mountain Grills and Hoggish Minds: W. O. Gant's Allusive Invective.Published in:2006By:Mills, Jerry LeathPublication type:Literary Criticism
"The Dark Was Hived with Flesh and Mystery": Thomas Wolfe, the American Adam, and the Polemical Persona of Race.Published in:2006By:Cash, WileyPublication type:Essay
Thomas Wolfe and the Family Romance.Published in:2006By:Moisy, AméliePublication type:Literary Criticism
W. O. Gant and the Restraint of Laughter.Published in:2006By:Dill, ScottPublication type:Literary Criticism
The Fall of the House of Gant: Home as Metaphor in Thomas Wolfe's "O Lost."Published in:2005By:Thompson, Bond D.Publication type:Literary Criticism