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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS);faqs.185
Books & Co (Madison at 74th)
Art, literature etc. Wonderful feeling, nice place to shop.
Another good literate person's bookstore, reminiscent of
Endicott. I've seen celebs shopping there, too (David
Byrne; Kathleen Turner)
List priced new books, but very eclectic with a philosophy
bent.
Barnes & Noble (Broadway and 74th)
Courtly Music (2067 Broadway btwn 71st and 72nd, suite 27 (on
the second floor--not well-labeled on the door)). Hours are
9:45-5:45 Tuesday to Saturday and they also have an 800 number
(2-RICHIE). "The focus is on early music, and they have books,
instruments, tapes (I don't recall if they have LPs or CDs),
instruction tapes and books, and give lessons. I saw someone
behind the desk wrapping something, so it looks like they will
do mail order. The staff seemed knowledgeable, and xeroxed off
a sheet for my friend of local branches of the American Recorder
Society for him to contact. All in all a nice shop."
Applause Books (211 W. 71st west of Broadway) (212-496-7511)
They specialize in film and theatre; some books that can
be found nowhere else.
Civilized Traveler (Broadway between 66th and 72nd). Opened spring of
'92, it's an upscale travel store with guidebooks and maps as
well as suitcases and a variety of gadgets and conveniences
for travelers. "Their collection isn't vast, but I'm hoping it
will build."
==========MIDTOWN=============
Argosy (59th btwn Park & Lexington)
They are very strong in used hardcover fiction (no sf
though), particularly older things from say circa 1920,
like James Branch Cabell. They also sell old prints and
Americana.
Antique and used books, maps, and prints.
Some beautiful books, but the owners are major goniffs
(thieves) so you'll have to hunt for bargains.
It is about five stories high and is one of those
books-stacked-up-the-walls-to-the-ceiling places; dim,
musty, dense, mysterious. You get the feeling that you
could find anything at all there if you only looked long
enough.
Barnes & Noble (6th Avenue and 57th)
Books Nippon (57th btwn 5th & 6th Avenues)
Books, cards, magazines in Japanese and English. Fair-sized
collection of English language books on a variety of
Japanese-related topics, including a large number of art
books. Also a large supply of Japanese language books and
periodicals.
J. N. Bartfield Fine Books (30 W 57th (3rd floor) btwn 5th & 6th Avenues)
This is a gallery-like place that carries mostly bound sets of
literature. Much of what they carry looks like old versions of
the fancy-book-of-the-month club-featuring-the-great-works-of-
literature-in-genuine-hand-tooled-leather offers that are
available these days. I am not, however, an old book expert so
I am not sure if that is a bad thing. I saw an old Vergil
edition for $495; this place ain't cheap but may be worth a
visit.
Rizzoli's (57th btwn 5th & 6th Avenues)
Probably the premier art book store in the city. Lots of
fun stuff, also foreign books + periodicals
A classy place, strong on art books.
Opulent bookstore specializing in art/architecture/design
books.
Italian Bookstore chain. Excellent art, design, and
architecture sections. New books at list prices.
If you like glossy art books at full price try Rizzoli's.
(Also has a downtown and a WTC store)
Hacker Art Books (4 West 57th Street) (212-688-7600)
Coliseum Books (57th & Broadway Avenue)
A good stock of new books, and open until eleven or
midnight. An independent.
"Coliseum is vast and carries everything that is in
somebody's mainstream; it is the only place I know, for
example, to purchase a copy of QUOTATIONS OF CHAIRMAN
MAO off the shelf." (But see below for a bookstore in
Chinatown that also has it.)
"Coliseum is large, and has a wide selection. I have not
found the staff to be very helpful. I wanted to special
order a book, and was told I could only do it Mon-Fri
during daytime hours. Looking through the literature
section, I found that they had nearly every single Martin
Amis book, but none by Kingsley Amis -- Not even LUCKY
JIM. They have a terrific poetry section."
Forbidden Planet (228 East 59th btwn 2nd & 3rd Avenues)
The store on 12th street is better, IMHO.
The Mysterious Book Shop (129 W. 56th)
Mystery books and so on. It also has its own publishing company
so they also have the latest copies of their own line
of mysteries. Book-signings by authors.
Patelson's (56th & 6th Ave, just behind Carnegie Hall)
The best place in NYC for books about music. A huge selection
covering all genres. They also are NYC's most-popular source
for classical music scores. They can special-order *anything*
music-related and will ship.
Doubleday (5th Ave & 53rd) -- like Dalton's...
They have access to everything, and order what's good, not
just what sells. Good store, decent selection, often good
salespeople. One of the best mystery book selections in the
city outside of the mystery specialty stores. Book-signings.
At the front of the store is a bookcase of signed books at
regular prices.
MOMA Bookstore (in the Museum) (53rd btwn 5th & 6th Avenues)
Good selection of books on art, and art books; great poster
section; you *don't* have to pay admission to get in.
At Christmas they expand across the street, or used to.
More neat stuff.
B. Dalton (5th Avenue & 53nd)
Granddaddy B. Dalton which is worth stopping into if you're
in the neighborhood. It is a lot better than the usual
run-of-the-mill mall rat B. Daltons and is well-stocked,
especially if you are looking for recent releases.
Also one on 8th and 6th Avenue.
Rand McNally (52nd btwn Lexington & 3rd Avenue)
Lots of national and international maps, guide books, globes.
Sky Books International Inc (48 E. 50th)
Look carefully since this is a small place on the second floor.
Their specialty is in military and aviation books and magazines
of which they have a good selection. In addition to hardcover
and paperback fiction, they have a good deal of stuff on tactics,
uniforms, history, aircraft, weapons, etc. They carry a number
of magazines which will be of interest to the plane freak and/or
model builder. Prices are reasonable but not really bargains.
They have a good bulletin board for those interested in buying
and selling military paraphernalia.
Librarie De France (Rockefeller Center, a small storefront on the Promenade
(near the skating rink, opposite the Teuscher's Chocolate shop :-)
The Promenade is located off of 5th Avenue, between 49th and 50th
streets) (212-581-8810)
Run by the same people as the French-Spanish Bookstore, a slightly
bigger store downtown on 5th at 19th street, which has many, many
more dictionaries. At first, the store appears to be very small,
but there is a downstairs section whith about five or six times the
space as the upstairs. I had been in the store several times before
I discovered the downstairs section. A very large selection of
French novels, short stories, non-fiction, etc. Some newspapers,
magazines, and records. They also have a reasonably large selection
of dictionaries and instruction books for other languages. Prices
tend to be high. Staff is usually fluent in French.
Kinokuniya Bookstore (49th btwn 5th & 6th Avenues)
Japanese books, origami paper, etc. Very large and
usually very busy. Japanese tour buses stop here
because of its proximity to Rockefeller Center. A bit
expensive but much better than any other Japanese
bookstore in New York.
Drama Book Shop (723 7th Avenue at 48th) (212-944-0595)
McGraw-Hill Book Store (48th & 6th Avenue in the basement of the
McGraw-Hill building.)
Best bet for technical books in the city.
An excellent selection for technical books, especially
computer books. Their mathematics section is also good,
as is their finance section. All publishers.
Shinbato (McGraw Hill Bldg)
Specializes in Japanese books and books pertaining to the
Japanese.
Gotham Book Mart (47th btwn 5th & 6th)
Excellent poetry, literature, philosophy etc. Practically
unique in the world.
United Nations Bookshop (General Assembly Building, E 45 St & First Ave)
(212-963-7680)
Has international affairs books, and UN publications.
Urban Center Books (457 Madison Ave) (212-935-3592)
Great place for Architecture/Planning/Urban Design Books
Travel Bookstore (199 Madison at 35th)
Important collection of maps, guides and books. Very
knowledgeable staff composed largely of travel-addicts, as
opposed to the younger Rand-McNally staff. Many more travel
commentary books than strict guide books.
Macy's (34th & 7th Avenue)
Surprisingly good!
Pak Books (27th btwn 3rd & Lexington)
Books on Middle Eastern culture, philosophy, etc.
==========DOWNTOWN/VILLAGE=============
Samuel French bookstore and reading room (45 W 25th) (212-206-8990)
Open 9-5 M-Fri; their ad says "1000's of play titles; out of
print archives for Samual French plays; bookstore & reading
room open to the public". I've never been there; caveat
tourist.
Victor Kamk(a)in (149 5th Avenue south of 22nd) (212-677-0776).
Russian Language bookstore. It's said to be good. ("That 'a'
appears in the Yellow Pages but not in the White Pages. No,
I'm really not that compulsive, I just tripped over the
discrepancy once.")
The French-Spanish Bookstore (5th Avenue and 19th)
A very large selection of French and Spanish novels, short stories,
non-fiction, etc. Some newspapers, magazines, and records. They
also have a reasonably large selection of dictionaries and
instruction books for other languages. Prices tend to be high.
They have a slightly smaller store uptown in Rockefeller Center.
Staff is usually fluent in French or Spanish.
Academy Bookstore (18th btwn 5th and 6th Avenues)
Small, well-kept.
Has strong humanities and soc.sci. section. Also a large
supply of used CDs, especially classical and opera!
Brunner/Mazel (19 Union Square West, 8th Floor) (212-924-3344)
Mostly psychology.
Skyline Bookstore (13 18th btwn 5th and 6th Avenues)
Across the street from Academy and apparently owned by the same
person. This one has a slightly different focus than Academy.
Book-Friends Cafe (18th btwn 5th and 6th Avenues)
The store is run by Elizabeth Cymmerman. It specializes in works
between 1890 and 1940 and, in addition, serves food and drink.
There is also a list of scheduled readings posted on the door.
The collection is small but the place seems inviting. The
concentration is on biography, hardback fiction, and gracious living.
Barnes & Noble (18th & 5th Avenue)
The sales annex, which is largely remaindered,
used, and discontinued books, and so on, is big.
A whole store for half-price stuff and another whole store
for textbooks. I think it is less well laid out than
Coliseum, but it is also better-stocked on some recent
things and is often cheaper.
The retail store across 5th Avenue is also huge,
with a great reference section.
? (14th btwn 6th and 7th Avenues)
Spanish-language bookstore. Big selection. Staff speaks
Spanish and English.
East West Books (5th Avenue btwn 13th and 14th) (also uptown)
Stocks books on Buddhism, Taoism, Sufism, Indian Religions also
New Age, self-improvement, health and healing. Cards, jewelry,
audio tapes, incense. Good sized stock.
Books of Wonder (17th & 7th Avenue)
Heavenly gift to adults who like children's books. Everything
from first editions to the latest paperbacks. They do readings
periodically. Periodic newsletter they'll send to customers
announcing new books.
Revolution Books (16th btwn 5th Ave & Union Square)
Huge Marxist & otherwise left wing inventory.
Book Scientific (16th btwn 5th Avenue & Union Square)
Scientific and technical books; good selection, 10% discount
to faculty or university researchers. They'll order books, and
ship them. With university ID, there are often extra discounts.
Best stock in the city of scientific books, and they offer
a 5% discount to students. It's hard to find on its own, being on
the 2nd floor with a tiny sign, but it's directly across from the
large red "Revolution Books" banner.
? (16th btwn 5th Avenue & Union Square)
Large used- and rare-book store, on the same floor as Book
Scientific. "Nice collection of plays, but I don't remember much
else about it."
Different Light (Hudson near 14th)
Gay and lesbian bookstore.
Biography Bookshop (Bleecker & 12th)
One poster says, "Nice store, but try the Strand first -- this
place is way overpriced." (Editorial note: this probably just
means that new books are in general over-priced.)
Mysterious Bookstore (Foul Play) (8th Avenue & 12th)
Mysteries & horror.
Strand Books (828 Broadway & 12th) (212-473-1452 or 800-366-3664)
This place is huge. They specialize in reviewers'
copies, used books, and the out of print.
"The Strand is one of the world's largest bookstores, and
yet the employees there, unlike those in many smaller
bookstores, really do know what is on the shelves and can
tell you immediately whether or not they have what you are
looking for:
'Do you have "The Complete Encyclopedia of Illustration,"
by...'
'By Heck. No, sorry; we don't.'
is a much better answer than :
'Uh, gee, I dunno...look around on the shelves.'"
There's a much smaller branch at the South Street Seaport.
The Strand has a separate store for antiquarian books next to
the main store (not at ground level), accessible by escort or
appointment. This store has a good selection of original
editions and valuable books.
Forbidden Planet (12th & Broadway)
"The Science Fiction and Fantasy Flea Market." Books, comic
books, posters, magazines--if you're at all into this stuff,
it's worth it. (Editorial note: I prefer the Science Fiction
Shop; FP seems too involved in marketing peripheral stuff, while
the SF Shop has been selling science fiction *books* for many
years now.)
Oscar Wilde Bookstore (Christopher btwn Gay and Greenwich Ave.)
Gay and lesbian books. This is a much older store than A
Different Light, and was probably the first such in the city.
(And, yes, it really is near Gay St!)
Three Lives Book Store (154 W 10th east of 7th Ave.)
A wide variety of subject matter, but seeming to concentrate on
women authors, reissues of 1920s and 1930s books. Very
interesting place to browse.
Judith's Room (Washington btwn Charles & 10th)
"I found this when I was hunting for a copy of Christine de
Pisan's 'Book of the City of Women' to use in a medieval philosophy
class. Not available in any university bookstore I searched, nor in
B&N or Strand. Not only did Judith's Room have the book, but the
saleswoman had read it and could discuss it, and recommend other
books by Christine, and other women of that period." It's also the
only feminist bookstore in the city. They sponsor readings.
Tower Books (Lafayette & 4th)
Good selection, open late, reasonable prices, eclectic
selection of magazines and out-of-town newspapers.
Pretty good discounts for hardbacks and best sellers.
Pageant, 109 E 9th, off 4th Avenue
Woody Allen shot one of the scenes in HANNAH AND HER
SISTERS here. Offbeat -- a peculiar mishmash of unexpected
gems buried in the dreck. I recently got an absolutely mint
first edition of William Gaddis' JR here for $5 -- not the
first time I've found a terrific book in this place for
next to nothing.
Probably some real finds in the incredibly disordered
upstairs -- I've never had the patience....
St. Marks Bookshop (St. Mark's Place (8th St) btwn 2nd & 3rd Avenues)
"A GREAT bookstore. Excellent selection of books for the
downtown intellectual." Though they had some financial
difficulties in the past, they are now in the black again.
Open fairly late. Smart, sometimes helpful, staff.
Art Bookstore? (Broadway and Bond)
An excellent art bookstore.
B. Dalton (8th & 6th Avenue)
Worth stopping into if you're in the neighborhood.
Well-stocked, especially if you are looking for recent
releases. Also one on 5th Avenue & 53nd.
??? (7th btwn 1st Avenue & Avenue A)
There is a bookstore (a slight walkdown from the street) on
the south side of the street, that has some great stuff and
the prices are very good. I don't know its name, or even if
it has one, but the owner is a older woman who has been in
the neighborhood a long time. She's slightly nutty, but you
can always play tourist and avoid confrontation.
Esoterica (61 4th Avenue just north of Astor Place)
Large stock of books on Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, occult
and New Age. Incense, jewelry, audio tapes.
Cooper Square Books (21 Astor Place) (212-533-2595)
Very large selection, non-existent staff. Better prices at Tower
Books, slightly better staff at St. Mark's Books.
Shakespeare & Co. (Broadway just north of 4th ) (also uptown)
A good, large selection, they're good about getting in the
new stuff quickly.
The Art of Reading (Mercer and Bleeker)
Piles of used books, and (for a change) strong sections in
math & science. They also have loads of used textbooks.
Science Fiction Shop (Bleeker west of Thompson)
Moved from their old Eighth Avenue location. This one *does*
have enough room to swing a (small) cat in; it also shares
the second floor with a comics store that is quite good.
Cinemabilia (Broadway at Houston)
On the second floor of an office building. A lot of cinema
books, occasionally priced above publisher's list. (I always
check BOOKS IN PRINT first.)
Spring Street Books (Spring near Thompson)
Another great collection. It is not a large place, but it is
filled with wonderful books. The poetry section is quite good,
for such a small store. They also have a nice selection of
magazines. The recent fiction section is arranged alphabetically
by title, rather than by author.
Untitled Cards (159 Prince)
Before art postcard shops became something to franchise,
there were cramped stores like this jammed with an
exquisite selection of cards. Another branch on W. Broadway
is more spacious and has an extensive art book selection,
but lacks the down home feel of the original.
Soho Books (351 W Broadway, 1/2 block below Broome) (212-226-3395).
Opened May '92. Good assortment of used books in a wide variety of
subject areas; biography section seemed especially diverse. Worth
dropping into on your way to buy new books at Spring St. Books and
Rizzoli.
Irish Books and Graphics (90 W Broadway)
New and used books mostly related to Irish history and culture.
Selection of Irish language (Irish Gaelic) books and periodicals.
Very pleasant place.
Rizzoli's (W Broadway around Prince)
Italian Bookstore chain. Excellent art, design, and architecture
sections; probably the premier art book store in the city. New
books at list prices. Lots of fun stuff, also foreign books and
periodicals. "A classy place, strong on art books." "Opulent
bookstore specializing in art/architecture/design books."
(Also has an uptown and a WTC store)
Guggenheim Soho Museum (Broadway and Prince)
A good art bookstore (big surprise, right?). There's absolutely
no reason to visit Rizzoli's and not here, or vice versa.
A Remainder & Used bookstore (Chambers btwn Broadway & 8th)
Called Harry's or Barney's or something similar. Prices are
great but ratio of remainders to used books is very high.
Lots of used paperbacks, if that's a lure.
Note: this might actually be the following:
Ruby's Book Sale (119 Chambers)
Really BARGAIN prices for books; many, many, NEW books in
the $40-$100 range can be had here for $15-$25; one book
I bought for my daughter was $47.95 NEW at Miller's (a
riding shop) and was purchased at Ruby's for $12!
Science Fiction, Mysteries, and More (140 Chambers west of W Broadway)
Opened June '92. It will have readings and signings. Details to
follow as I get them.
Strand Books (South Street Seaport)
Nowhere near as large as the one on Broadway.
Oriental Culture Enterprises Co, Inc (13-17 Elizabeth), second
floor. Open seven days a week, 10 am to 8 pm.
"I got my five-volume SELECTIONS FROM MAO ZEDONG there.
(They have it in English, too, by the way, along with Lenin,
Marx, and others.) A great selection of books, most of which
are in Chinese. They also sell things needed for Chinese
calligraphy, Chinese musical instruments, recordings of
Chinese music, Chinese-language periodicals, and many other
things Chinese. An attached art gallery sells paintings.
While browsing through the books, sit down and enjoy a cup of
tea free of charge. Well worth a visit. Two complaints: it's
more expensive than it should be, and too many of the books
are damaged (by careless customers, or by thoughtless staff?).
Unquestionably the best bookstore in all of Chinatown."
Isaac Mendoza's (used) (2nd floor loft above Ann near City Hall)
They have the best selection of used hardcover science
fiction in town, by far. They are also strong in a number
of other categories and their prices are reasonable -- I
saw a copy of THE ICEMAN COMETH inscribed by Eugene O'Neill
there once, for $25.
Rizzoli's (World Financial Center) (212-385-1400)
Probably the premier art book store in the city. Lots of
fun stuff, also foreign books + periodicals
A classy place, strong on art books.
Opulent bookstore specializing in art/architecture/design
books.
Italian Bookstore chain. Excellent art, design, and
architecture sections. New books at list prices.
If you like glossy art books at full price try Rizzoli's.
(Also has an uptown and downtown store, and they have opened
up a branch in Bloomingdale's 59th & Lexington Avinue. They
also have stores in Boston, Chicago, Costa Mesa and
Williamsburg.
Waldenbooks (59 Broadway south of Wall St.)
Very strong on finance. Reasonably strong on everything else.
Also, there are lots of specialty bookstores, usually around each of
the colleges and universities in the area (Columbia, NYU, St. Johns,
CUNY, and so on).
"What you really need is a copy of "The Bookstore Book" (subtitle A
Guide to Manhattan Booksellers) by Robert Egan, published by Avon.
The copy I have has a date of 1979, but there may be a more recent
edition. It lists over 750 bookstores, categorized by type of store
and subject area, with several useful indexes. I've found all sorts
of interesting bookstore using it. Try to get a copy."
Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | ecl@mtgzy.att.com
Xref: bloom-picayune.mit.edu rec.arts.books:54958 news.answers:4767
Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!usenet
From: tittle@ics.uci.edu (Cindy Tittle Moore)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.books,news.answers
Subject: Robin Hood Booklist (rec.arts.books)
Supersedes: <books/robin-hood_723016818@athena.mit.edu>
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Date: 24 Dec 1992 06:02:17 GMT
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Reply-To: tittle@ics.uci.edu
NNTP-Posting-Host: pit-manager.mit.edu
Summary: This is a periodically posted informational post about books
on Robin Hood. It includes novels, poems, research, and a
few related stories.
X-Last-Updated: 1992/12/22
Archive-name: books/robin-hood
Version: 1.4
Last-modified: 21 December 1992
Periodicity: 25 days
Copies of this FAQ may be obtained by anonymous ftp to
pit-manager.mit.edu (18.172.1.27) under
/pub/usenet/news.answers/books/robin-hood. Or, send email to
mail-server@pit-manager.mit.edu with the subject line "send
usenet/news.answers/books/robin-hood", leaving the body of the message
empty.
This is a reading list involving the Robin Hood legend.
My criterion for these books is that it be concerned with the Robin
Hood legend in some way. I have three categories here: novelizations
(fiction), poetry, and non-fiction (eg, studies and research). There
are a good number of research and old-manuscript references listed
here that are probably unavailable except through a University-level
library. I have split the books up into the following categories:
* Medieval fiction: often published at any point in time, but
discussing texts from this period. I've arbitrarily put
everything pre 1600 in this section, although I realize this
isn't the "medieval" period.
* Fiction (1600-1899): involves any fiction published during this
time. If I have an 18th century commentary on a 15th century
work, that goes here. (If it's a 18th century republication of
something from prior to 1600, let me know and I will move it to
the above category.)
* Fiction (1900-present): includes all fictionalized accounts
published in this century.
* Poetry: includes all poetic versions of the Robin Hood legend,
regardless of when (first) published or written.
* Non-fiction and research: includes analyses of the Robin Hood
legend: how it started, what purpose it filled, etc. Some of the
texts that republish old work but include an analysis may have
been mistakenly filed in one of the fiction categories above; let
me know if this is the case.
I encourage you to send in any comments you have on a particular book
for inclusion. I'd like to be able to give a sense of what the book
offers. In addition, if you have references to books on Robin Hood
that are *not* listed here, please send them to me for inclusion.
Disclaimer: I have not vouched for the accuracy of each and every
entry in this list. I would like also to indicate which books are no
longer in print. If you find mistakes or have additional information
on a reference, by all means, let me know.
Thanks to: Ann Carlson, Matthew Clark, Dan'l Danehy-Oakes, Roger
Gardiner, Larry Hammer, Tovah Hollander, Jane Lean, Robert Oliver,
Emma Pease, Tirza van Rijn, and Elaine Thompson for their help in
putting this list together.
Changes are indicated with |'s.
Table of Contents:
1. Fiction (medieval)
2. Fiction (1600-1899)
3. Fiction (1900-present)
4. Poetry
5. Non-fiction and research
1. Fiction (medieval)
---------------------
_The gallant achievements of Robin Hood : The famous history of Fryer
Bacon: the romance of Robert the Devil_ (Edinburgh : O. Schulze,
[1904?]). Early English prose romances.
Clawson, William Hall, _The gest of Robin Hood_ (University of Toronto
library, 1909).
Gutch, John Mathew, ed., _A Lytell geste of Robyn Hode and his meiny_
(Reprinted from the edition edited by John Mathew Gutch, following the
Wynken de Worde and William Copland texts, by Edwin and Robert
Grabhorn for the Westgate Press ;... San Francisco, [1932], 1847).
2. Fiction (1600-1899)
----------------------
_The Adventures of Robert, Earl of Huntingdon, commonly called Robin
Hood, the famous English archer : being a complete history of all the
merry adventures and valiant battles_ (Baltimore [Md.] : Printed and
sold by William Warner, 1812).
_The History of Robin Hood. A new and correct edition_. (London : Printed
for the Booksellers, 1816). Juvenile.
Dumas, Alexandre, Robin des bois. (Paris, Editions Baudelaire
[1966]). Translations available.
Egan, Pierce (the Younger), _Robin Hood and Little John : or, The
merry men of Sherwood forest_ (London: Foster and Hextall, 1840).
Marsh, John B., _The life and adventures of Robin Hood_ (London, New
York, G. Routledge and sons [1865?]).
Mills, Alfred, _Sherwood Forest, or, Robin Hood and Little John_
(London : Published by E. Wallis ..., [ca. 1825]).
M. P. (Martin Parker), _A true tale of Robin Hood, or, A brief touch of
the life and death of that renowned outlaw, Robert, Earl of
Huntington, vulgarly called Robin Hood : who lived and dyed in A.D.
1198, being the 9th year of the reign..._ ([London] : Printed for J.
Clark, W. Thackeray, and T. Passinger, 1686).
Pyle, Howard, _The merry adventures of Robin Hood : of great renown in
Nottinghamshire_ (New York : Charles Scribner's Sons, 1884, many
reprints). This is a classic rendition, most often recommended to
readers. A little "old fashioned" in its phrasing, it has a style and
flair all its own.
Southey, Robert and Caroline Southey, _Robin Hood : a fragment_
London : Edinburgh : William Blackwood, 1847).