Letters of William Gaddis

Letters of William Gaddis

Afterword by Sarah Gaddis
Edited by Steven Moore

Steven Moore

Steven Moore earned his Ph.D. at Ruttgers University. He is a noted William Gaddis scholar and wrote William Gaddis, the first comprehensive critical guide to his work, and A Reader's Guide to William Gaddis's The Recognitions.

Moore has edited a number of books, including Beerspit Night and Cursing: The Correspondence of Charles Bukowski & Sheri Martinelli 1960-1967 and In Recognition of William Gaddis. He has also contributed essays, articles, and reviews to a number of newspapers, journals, and magazines.


Ronald Firbank: An Annotated Bibliography of Secondary Materials, 1905-1995
Steven Moore
Following the much-deserved rediscovery of early modernist Ronald Firbank's works in the 1980s, this annotated bibliography collects reviews of the satirist's books, synopses of books and essays about Firbank, references to creative works inspired by...



Edited by Steven Moore

Complete Plays
Ronald Firbank
Complementing Dalkey Archive's edition of Firbank's Complete Short Stories, Complete Plays makes available for the first time in one volume this inimitable British writer's three excursions into drama: The Mauve Tower (1904),...



Introduction by Steven Moore

Complete Plays
Ronald Firbank
Complementing Dalkey Archive's edition of Firbank's Complete Short Stories, Complete Plays makes available for the first time in one volume this inimitable British writer's three excursions into drama: The Mauve Tower (1904),...



Fire the Bastards!
Jack Green
Fire the Bastards! is a scorching attack on the book-review media using the critical reception of William Gaddis's 1955 novel The Recognitions as a case study. Although this monumental novel is now generally regarded as one of the few indisputable...



Afterword by Steven Moore

Collected Writings
Olive Moore
Olive Moore is one of the great undiscovered novelists of the twentieth century. Between 1929 and 1934 (between the ages of 24 and 29), she published four brilliant books that earned her a reputation as an enfant terrible of British literature. After...



Ladies Almanack
Djuna Barnes
"Now this be a Tale of as fine a Wench as ever wet Bed . . . Thus begins this Almanack, which all Ladies should carry about with them, as the Priest his Breviary, as the Cook his Recipes, as the Doctor his Physic, as the Bride her Fears, and as the...