Anton Chekhov, Ralph E. Matlaw
The thirty-four stories in this volume span Chekhov’s creative career.More
Joseph Conrad, Robert Kimbrough
The text is the authoritative version used in the Collected Works
published in 1921, which Conrad prepared from a 1910 reprint of the
original English version of 1898.More
George Meredith, Robert M. Adams
This edition of Meredith's satirical novel of manners reprints the text
of 1897, which incorporated Meredith's revisions to the first edition
of 1879.More
George Herbert, Mario A. Di Cesare
This volume presents the major works of five poets—George Herbert,
Richard Crashaw, Andrew Marvell, Henry Vaughan, and Thomas Traherne.More
Henry James, James W. Tuttleton
The text reprinted in this volume is based on an examination of the
five printed versions of The American (first published in 1877) which
appeared in James's lifetime, and it is preceded by his "Preface to the
New York Edition" (1907).More
Charles Dickens, George Ford, Sylvere Monod
This authoritative text of Bleak House was the first to be established
by a comparative study of all the surviving versions of Dickens’ novel,
incorporating evidence from the original manuscript and corrected
proofs.More
Giovanni Boccaccio, Peter E. Bondanella, Mark Musa
This volume contains twenty-one of the hundred novelle that comprise Boccaccio’s masterpiece.More
Ben Jonson, Hugh Maclean
This volume offers an abundant and representative selection of the
verse of Ben Jonson and the Cavalier poets.More
Richard L. Hoffman, Maxwell S. Luria
This Norton Critical Edition offers one of the largest collections of
Middle English lyrics ever made available to the college student.More
Jonathan Swift, Robert A. Greenberg, William B. Piper
This volume contains the complete and definitive texts of virtually all
of Swift's major works, as well as a generous selection of his poetry
and other writings.More
Sophocles, Luci Berkowitz, Theodore F. Brunner
This translation is for the contemporary reader. Specifically commissioned for stage production, it rings easily on the modern ear and yet remains faithful to Sophocles' original, avoiding the archaisms of other translations.More
John Henry Cardinal Newman, David J. DeLaura
The text of the Apologia reprinted in this volume is the definitive
text, embodying all of Newman's later changes, which reached its final
form about 1886. Extensive notes are provided.More