Robert Burns/Bibliography: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Martin Wyatt
imported>Martin Wyatt
 
Line 9: Line 9:
| date = 2009-01-25
| date = 2009-01-25
}}
}}
*Hogg, Patrick Scott.  Robert Burns: The Patriot Bard.  Mainstream Publishing Co (Edinburgh) Ltd. 2008
*{{Cite book
*{{Cite book
| publisher = Alloway Publishing Ltd
| publisher = Alloway Publishing Ltd
Line 25: Line 26:
| date = 1995-10-19
| date = 1995-10-19
}}
}}
===Collections===
===Collections===
*Kinsley, J (ed). Poems and Songs of Robert Burns (with music). 3 vols. Oxford University Press. 1968
*Kinsley, J (ed). Poems and Songs of Robert Burns (with music). 3 vols. Oxford University Press. 1968

Latest revision as of 13:54, 31 March 2014

This article is developed but not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
A list of key readings about Robert Burns.
Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner. For formatting, consider using automated reference wikification.

Biographies

  • Crawford, Robert (2009-01-25). The Bard: Robert Burns, A Biography. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691141711. 
  • Hogg, Patrick Scott. Robert Burns: The Patriot Bard. Mainstream Publishing Co (Edinburgh) Ltd. 2008
  • Mackay, James a. (2008-10-30). Robert Burns Poet 1759 - 1796. Alloway Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0907526934. 
  • McIntyre, Ian (1995-10-19). Dirt & Deity: A Life of Robert Burns. HarperCollins Canada / Trade. ISBN 0002159643. 

Collections

  • Kinsley, J (ed). Poems and Songs of Robert Burns (with music). 3 vols. Oxford University Press. 1968
  • Burns, Robert; Andrew O'Hagan (2009-01-06). A Night Out with Robert Burns: The Greatest Poems. Douglas Gibson Books. ISBN 0771017421. 
  • Life and Works of Robert Burns. (1800) J.C. Currie

(James Currie was once thought to have distorted the story of Burns's life, to use the poet as a 'Dreadful Warning' against the evils of drink. R.D.Thornton's James Currie: The Entire Stranger and Robert Burns (1963) argues that in his own youth, Currie was so intemperate that the respectability of his middle-age made it hard for him publicly to avoid condemning one whose sins were so like his own had been. See Database of the Correspondence of James Currie (1756-1805) University of Glasgow)