Harold Bloom
Harold Bloom (1930–2019) was an American literary critic and Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University, renowned for his innovative theories on literary influence, the Western canon, and Shakespeare. He authored over 50 books, including The Anxiety of Influence (1973), The Western Canon (1994), and Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human (1998), and was considered one of the most influential critics of his time.
Literary Criticism
Humanities
J.D. Salinger (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
Homer's Odyssey (Blm's Notes) (Bloom's Notes)
Alex Haley's the Autobiography of Malcolm X (Bloom's Guides)
Walt Whitman (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
Eugene O'Neill's the Iceman Cometh (Modern Critical Interpretations, Modern American Literature)
Walt Whitman (Bloom's Classic Critical Views)
Agatha Christie (MCV) (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
James Joyce (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
Homer's The Iliad (Bloom's Guides)
Geoffrey Chaucer (Bloom's Classic Critical Views)
William Blake's Songs of Innocence and of Experience (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)
Joseph Conrad (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
Brave New World (Bloom's Nts) (Bloom's Notes)
Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms
Tom Wolfe (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
Nathaniel Hawthorne (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
William Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)
1984 (Bloom's Guides)
Nathaniel Hawthorne's the Scarlet Letter: Bloom's Notes (Contemporary Literary Views)
T. S. Eliot (Modern Critical Views)
Edmund Spenser (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)
Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights (Bloom's Guides)
Macbeth (Bloom's Notes) (Oop)
Jay Wright (Bloom's Modern Critical Views)