James D Hart Popular Books

James D Hart Biography & Facts

James David Hart, (April 18, 1911 – 23 July 1990) was an American literary scholar and professor at University of California, Berkeley for fifty-four years. He is most notable for writing The Oxford Companion to American Literature and A Companion to California. Biography Hart was born in San Francisco, California. He received a bachelor's degree from Stanford University, followed by a Ph.D. from Harvard University. While studying for his doctorate at Harvard University, Hart conceived and began work on an American literature companion book. It is reported that in 1934, after looking for such a book among second-hand bookstores on what was Fourth Avenue below 14th Street in Manhattan, New York to no avail, Hart entered the offices of Oxford University Press on Fifth Avenue upon passing. Inside, on a whim, he told the receptionist that he had an idea for a book, which prompted editor Margaret Nicholson to come out to meet him. He questioned her about the existence of such a book, to which she replied, "We've been looking for someone to do that." She took him in to see director of the press Geoffrey Cumberlege. Cumberlege wanted to see examples of his work, and Hart had none. Furthermore, Cumberledge was sailing to Europe on the RMS Queen Mary the next day, so Hart returned to his hotel room and produced essays on Ralph Waldo Emerson and Richard Henry Dana amongst others, and delivered them to Cumberledge the next morning. A few months later he was granted a contract, and wrote the book alone. Critic Alfred Kazin said it is "the most valuable handbook I know on our literature," and had been on his desk for nearly half a century. At the University of California, Berkeley, Hart served as chairman of the English department. He was also the university's vice chancellor from 1957 until 1960. In 1969 he was appointed director of the University of California, Berkeley's Bancroft Library. He was a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the American Antiquarian Society. He was a trustee of Mills College from 1970 until 1986, and was president of the board for three years. In 1963 he was appointed a CBE. Hart died in his home in Berkeley, California on July 23, 1990, at the age of seventy-nine. His family reported that he had died of a brain tumor. Hart has had articles published in American Heritage, American Literature and American Quarterly, as well as other general and scholarly journals. He also has published works on Robert Louis Stevenson, Frank Norris, Western history, popular writing and fine printing. The 1981 reissue of Moby Dick by Herman Melville published by the University of California Press features an essay by Hart entitled A Note on the California Edition, where at the time he is credited as Director of The Bancroft Library. Family He was married to Ruth Arnstein, a California native, born December 2, 1917. She died in Berkeley on December 4, 1977, Later, he married Constance Crowley Bowles. His daughter, the writer Carol Field, died of a stroke on March 10, 2017 at her home in San Francisco; his son, the pollster Peter Hart, lives in Washington D.C.. As of July 24, 1990, he has four grandchildren. Bibliography The Oxford Companion to American Literature The Concise Oxford Companion to American Literature. 1986 A Companion to California, Oxford University Press, 1978. revised edition, UC Press, 1991 The Popular Book: A History of America's Literary Taste (1950) From Scotland to Silverado by Robert Louis Stevenson (editor) Influences on California Printing (and Ritchie Ward) Fine Printing: The San Francisco Tradition Lawton Kennedy, Printer by Ruth Teiser (foreword) America's Literature (and Clarence Louis Frank Gohdes) Further reading Bliss, Anthony. The Legacy of James D. Hart at the Bancroft Library 1970-1990. Friends of the Bancroft Library, 1991. References External links Guide to the James D. Hart Papers at The Bancroft Library James David Hart at Library Thing James D. Hart at Borders (UK) . Discover the James D Hart popular books. Find the top 100 most popular James D Hart books.

Best Seller James D Hart Books of 2024

  • Clarissa, or the History of A Young Lady synopsis, comments

    Clarissa, or the History of A Young Lady

    Samuel Richardson & Angus Ross

    Pressured by her unscrupulous family to marry a wealthy man she detests, the young Clarissa Harlowe is tricked into fleeing with the witty and debonair Robert Lovelace and places h...

  • The Great Shroud synopsis, comments

    The Great Shroud

    Vera Morris

    THE ANGLIAN DETECTIVE AGENCY ARE BACKAldeburgh, 1972. The local community is devastated by the accidental death of a local fisherman. Another tragedy to add to the recent murders o...

  • The Loophole synopsis, comments

    The Loophole

    Vera Morris

    There is no shortcut to the truth . . .On the hunt for two missing persons, Laurel Bowman and Frank Diamond find they have another complex and dangerous case on their hands as they...

  • The Ship of Death synopsis, comments

    The Ship of Death

    Vera Morris

    With a ruthless criminal loose on the Suffolk coast, life is anything but peaceful for the Anglian Detective Agency . . .At Rooks Wood Farm, Rosalind Breen's twin sons grieve her d...

  • Some Particular Evil synopsis, comments

    Some Particular Evil

    Vera Morris

    You can run but you can't hide . . .Laurel Bowman has started a new life as a teacher on the isolated Suffolk coast while she tries to get over the murder of her sister. But it see...

  • Selected Poems and Letters synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems and Letters

    Arthur Rimbaud, Jeremy Harding & John Sturrock

    A phenomenonally precicious schoolboy, Rimbaud was still a teenager when he became notorious as Europe's most shocking and exhilarating poet. During his brief 5year reign as the e...