Incoming Resources
- Well-behaved women seldom make history, by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
- A study of Scarletts, Scarlett O'Hara and her literary daughters, Margaret Donovan Bauer
- Women and marriage in Victorian fiction, Jenni Calder
- In the shadow of Agatha Christie, classic crime fiction by forgotten female writers : 1850-1917, edited by Leslie S. Klinger
- Follies of God, Tennessee Williams and the women of the fog, James Grissom
- Cassandra speaks, when women are the storytellers, the human story changes, Elizabeth Lesser
- March sisters, on life, death, and Little women, Kate Bolick, Jenny Zhang, Carmen Maria Machado, Jane Smiley
- Inseparable, desire between women in literature, Emma Donoghue
- How to be a heroine, or, what I've learned from reading too much, Samantha Ellis
- Women of will, following the feminine in Shakespeare's plays, Tina Packer
- Nathaniel Hawthorne's The scarlet letter, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Dead girls, essays on surviving an American obsession, Alice Bolin
- Wonder Woman unbound, the curious history of the world's most famous heroine, Tim Hanley
- Seduction and betrayal;, women and literature
- A jury of her peers, American women writers from Anne Bradstreet to Annie Proulx, by Elaine Showalter