Charles Lamb Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Aesthetic Universality: The Nostalgia of Elia 150 Years after
- In Search of Charles Lamb
- Charles and Mary Lamb: The Critical Heritage
- Another Elia: Essays in a Minor Key
- Politics by Indirection: Charles Lamb's Seventeenth-Century Renegade, John Woodvil
- Coleridge on Charles Lamb's Poetic Craftsmanship
- Voices Together: Lamb, Hazlitt, and the London
- Charles Lamb's Elia as Clerk: The Commercial Employment of a Literary Writer
- Lamb and Reader-Response Criticism
- That Dangerous Figure—Irony
- ‘A Soul Set Apart’: Lamb and the Border-Land of Imaginative Experience
- Ideology and Editing: The Political Context of the Elia Essays
- How Green Was My Elia?
- Elia: An Introduction
- Lamb's Early Satire of the Economists
- Charles Lamb and the Cost of Seriousness
- ‘Essence’ and ‘Accident’ in Lamb's Elia Essays
- Charles Lamb and Jacobean Drama
- Lamb's ‘Confessions of a Drunkard’ in Context
- Recent Approaches to Charles Lamb
- A Study of Charles Lamb's ‘Living without God in the World.’
- Criticism in Lamb's Lifetime
- Further Reading