Search by
  •  
     
     

Our Authors

Browse Alphabetically:


  • Displaying 1-15 of 69   
  • prev 
  •  1
  •  2
  •  3
  •  4
  •  5
  •  next
  •   >

Diana Hacker

Diana Hacker personally class-tested her handbooks with nearly four thousand students over thirty-five years at Prince George’s Community College in Maryland, where she was a member of the English faculty. Hacker handbooks, built on innovation and on a keen understanding of the challenges facing student writers, are the most widely adopted in America. Hacker handbooks, all published by Bedford/St. Martin’s, include The Bedford Handbook, Eighth Edition (2010); A Writer’s Reference, Seventh Edition (2011); Rules for Writers, Sixth Edition (2008); and A Pocket Style Manual, Fifth Edition (2008).

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Sebastian Haffner

Sebastian Haffner was born in Berlin in 1907, and died in 1999. In 1938, he was forced to flee to Britain, where he worked as a journalist. In 1954, he returned to Germany and became a distinguished historian and commentator.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Michael Hague

Michael Hague has illustrated some of the best-loved works of children's literature, including The Velveteen Rabbit, The Wizard of Oz, and The Teddy Bears' Picnic. His lush, detailed watercolors have earned him a dedicated following and a reputation as one of America's foremost illustrators of books for children. He lives with his wife, Kathleen, in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Joe Haldeman

Having won the Hugo and Nebula Award's more times than any other author, Joe Haldeman is an ultimate household name in science fiction.  A Vietnam Veteran and Purple Heart recipient, since the original publication of The Forever War, Joe has maintained a continuous string of SF best-sellers, and as a speaker and panelist, has been a constant presence on the SF convention circuit.  A longtime tenured Professor of Creative Writing at MIT, beyond his own career, from Cory Doctorow to John Scalzi, Haldeman is widely awknowledged as a key mentor figure to many of this generation's crop of rising SF stars.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Kim Hall

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


David Hamilton

David Hamilton is a Professor of English at the University of Iowa, where he has directed the MFA program in literary nonfiction and edited The Iowa Review. His essays have been published in numerous journals, including the Connecticut Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, and College English; his books are Ossabaw (Salt Publishing) and Deep River: A Memoir of a Missouri Farm (University of Missouri Press).

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


David Hamilton

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Tim Hamilton

Tim Hamilton has produced art for The New York Times Book Review, Cicada magazine, King Features, BOOM Studios, Mad Magazine, and Serializer.net. He most recently adapted Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island into a graphic novel for Puffin Graphics.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Darell Hammond

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Barry Hampe

Barry Hampe has made more than two hundred documentary films and information videos as director or scriptwriter or both.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Carolyn Handa

Carolyn Handa is a Professor of English and a faculty member in the Composition, Rhetoric, and English Studies program at the University of Alabama. She has been interested in the influence of culture and visual rhetoric on the World Wide Web for well over a decade.  She wrote a chapter (“Analyzing Digital Text as Rhetorical Space: Crossing Untraditional Frontiers”) for Negotiating a Meta-Pedagogy: Learning from Other Disciplines, edited by Emily Golson and Toni Glover (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009). Her coedited volume (with Sharon James McGee) Discord and Direction: The Post-Modern Writing Program Administrator appeared in 2005. In 2001 she was the guest editor for two special issues of Computers and Composition devoted to the subject of digital literacy, digital rhetoric, computers and composition. She has coauthored a chapter on the cultural and literacy implications of the World Wide Web for Greece and has also published several pieces on computer pedagogy and classroom design. She edited the volume Computers and Community Teaching Composition in the Twenty-first Century (Boynton/Cook, 1990) and has also published articles on the contemporary poet Elizabeth Bishop in American Poetry, the South Atlantic Quarterly, and Contemporary Authors.  Her other research interests include the social and political implications of computers in the writing classroom, collaborative learning, basic writing, and contemporary Irish poetry.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Thomas Hardy

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Akiba Sullivan Harper

Akiba Sullivan Harper is a professor of English at Spelman College and the editor of The Return of Simple.

 

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Sharon M. Harris

Sharon M. Harris, a professor of English and director of the Humanities Institute at the University of Connecticut, is the author of Dr. Mary Walker: An American Radical; Executing Race: Early Women’s Narratives of Race, Class, and the Law; and Rebecca Harding Davis and American Realism. Works she has edited or coedited include Periodical Literature in Eighteenth-Century America; Blue Pencils, Hidden Hands: Women Editing Periodicals, 1830-1910; Rebecca Harding Davis: Writing Cultural Autobiography; and American Women Writers to 1800. She has received numerous teaching awards for undergraduate and graduate teaching.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player


Gary Harrison

Gary Harrison (PhD, Stanford University), professor and director of undergraduate studies at the University of New Mexico, has won numerous fellowships and awards for scholarship and teaching. He has taught courses in world literature, British Romanticism, and literary theory at the University of New Mexico since 1987. Harrison’s publications include a critical study on William Wordsworth, Wordsworth’s Vagrant Muse: Poetry, Poverty, and Power (1994), and many articles on the literature and culture of the early nineteenth century.

SEE AUTHOR'S PAGE

Alternative content

Get Adobe Flash player

  • Displaying 1-15 of 69   
  • prev 
  •  1
  •  2
  •  3
  •  4
  •  5
  •  next
  •   >