Thomas Pynchon bibliography

The bibliography of Thomas Pynchon (b. 1937) includes both fiction and nonfiction.

Thomas Pynchon
bibliography
Pynchon's signature
Books9
Novels8
Stories6
References and footnotes

Fiction

Books

Year Title Format Pages Publisher Unique identifiers Ref.
1963 V. Novel 492 Lippincourt (Philadelphia)
  • LCCN 63-8634
  • OCLC 288349
[1]
1966 The Crying of Lot 49 Novella[note 1] 183 Lippincourt (Philadelphia) [3]
1973 Gravity's Rainbow Novel 760 Viking Press (New York)
[4]
1984 Slow Learner Short story collection 193 Little, Brown (Boston)
[5]
1990 Vineland Novel 385 Little, Brown (Boston)
[6]
1997 Mason & Dixon Novel 773 Henry Holt (New York)
[6]
2006 Against the Day Novel 1,085 Penguin Books (New York)
[6]
2009 Inherent Vice Novel 369 Penguin Books (New York)
[6]
2013 Bleeding Edge Novel 477 Penguin Books (New York)
[6]

Short stories

Date Title Publication Collected in
Slow Learner
Ref.
Mar
1959
"The Small Rain" Cornell Writer (Vol. 6, No. 2) Yes [7]
Spring
1959
"Mortality and Mercy in Vienna" Epoch (Vol. 9, No. 4) No [7]
1960 "Low-lands" New World Writing 16 Yes [7]
Spring
1960
"Entropy" Kenyon Review (Vol. 22, No. 2) Yes [8]
1961 "Under the Rose"[note 2] Noble Savage 3 Yes [10]
Dec 19–26
1959
"The Secret Integration" The Saturday Evening Post Yes [10]

Excerpts

This section includes excerpts published prior to the excerpted work. It does not include excerpts reprinted after the publication of the excerpted work.

Date Title of excerpt Excerpted work Publication Ref.
1965 "In Which Esther Gets a Nose Job" V. Black Humor[note 3] [10]
Dec
1965
"The World (This One), the Flesh (Mrs. Oedipa Maas), and the Testament of Pierce Inverarity" The Crying of Lot 49 Esquire [10]
Mar
1966
"The Shrink Flips" The Crying of Lot 49 Cavalier [11]

Juvenilia

Date Title Publication Notes Ref.
1952–53 "Voice of the Hamster" Purple and Gold Vol. 9, No. 2 (Nov 13, 1952) Purple and Gold was a student publication at Oyster Bay High School. These stories were republished in an appendix of Chris Mead's 1989 bibliography of Pynchon's works; see Mead 1989, pp. 155–167. [12]
Purple and Gold Vol. 9, No. 3 (Dec 18, 1952) [13]
Purple and Gold Vol. 9, No. 4 (Jan 22, 1953) [14]
Purple and Gold Vol. 9, No. 5 (Feb 19, 1953) [15]
Mar 19,
1953
"Ye Legend of Sir Stupid and the Purple Knight" Purple and Gold Vol. 9, No. 6 [16]
"The Boys" [17]
1958 Minstrel Island Unpublished Unpublished, unfinished manuscript co-written with Kirkpatrick Sale. Minstrel Island is a draft of the libretto for a dystopian sci-fi musical. The manuscript is held by the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. [18]

Nonfiction

Date Title Genre Publication Publisher Notes Ref.
Dec
1960
"Togetherness" Technical writing Aerospace Safety Vol. 16, No. 12 United States Air Force Written during Pynchon's employment at Boeing. Byline given as "Thomas H. [sic] Pynchon".[19] Pynchon's middle name is Ruggles.[20] [21]
1960–
1962
[Various uncredited articles] Technical writing Bomarc Service News Boeing See section below. [22]
Aug
1965
Letter to Jules Siegel Letter Cavalier Vol. 15, No. 146, p. 16 Fawcett Publications Several paragraphs from the letter—totaling 228 words—were quoted in "The Dark Triumvirate", an article in Cavalier magazine by Siegel (1935–2012) about the "black humor" of Pynchon, Bruce Jay Friedman, and Joseph Heller.[23] Siegel indicated that the letter had been addressed to "a suicidal writer friend" but did not refer to its recipient by name.[24] Others have surmised that it had been addressed to Siegel himself.[25] Pynchon recommended the article to a friend, the folk etymologist Peter Tamony, indicating that he did not object to Siegel's extensive quotation from a private letter.[26] In 1984, Steven Moore reprinted the quoted portion of the letter in the Fall 1984 issue of Pynchon Notes.[27] [27]
Dec
1965
"A Gift of Books" Review Holiday Vol. 38, No. 6 Curtis Publishing Company Review of the 1958 Western novel Warlock by American author Oakley Hall (1920–2008).[28] [10]
Jun 12,
1966
"A Journey into the Mind of Watts" Essay The New York Times Magazine The New York Times Essay on the Watts riots of August 11–16, 1965, and their aftermath in the neighborhood of Watts, Los Angeles, California.[29] [30]
Jul 17,
1966
"Pros and Cohns" Letter to the editor The New York Times Book Review The New York Times Response to an accusation of plagiarism directed at Pynchon by the French author Romain Gary, who asserted that Pynchon had stolen "Genghis Cohen"—the name of a character in The Crying of Lot 49—from the titular character of Gary's 1967 novel The Dance of Genghis Cohn (La danse de Gengis Cohn). Pynchon denied the allegation, said he had never heard of Gary or his works, and claimed that their independent invention of a "trivial" pun on the name Genghis Khan was purely coincidental.[31] [32]
1976 Letter to Richard Wilbur Letter Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters, 2nd series, Vol. 26, pp. 43–46: "Presentation to Thomas Pynchon of the Howells Medal for Fiction of the Academy by William Styron" American Academy of Arts and Letters The letter declined the William Dean Howells Medal for Fiction, which Pynchon had been awarded by the American Academy of Arts and Letterss for Gravity's Rainbow. At the time, Wilbur was president of the Academy.[33] [34]
Apr 28,
1977
Letter to John Calvin Batchelor Letter to the editor The SoHo Weekly News Vol. 4, No. 30 (quoted in "The Ghost of Richard Fariña" by Batchelor) Michael Goldstein In an article published by the SoHo Weekly News on April 24, 1976, Batchelor alleged that there was no such person as Thomas Pynchon. Instead, Batchelor posited, the name was merely a pseudonym of J. D. Salinger, who had withdrawn from public life and stopped publishing fiction just before Pynchon's career began.[35] In a letter written on MGM stationery, Pynchon replied: "Not bad. Keep trying."[36] Batchelor quoted the letter in a follow-up piece, in which he conceded Pynchon's existence, maintained that Salinger had written most of Pynchon's works, and suggested that Donald Barthelme or even Pynchon himself had contributed to the Pynchon oeuvre.[37] Later, Batchelor accepted Pynchon's sole authorship of his books.[38] [39]
1983 Introduction to Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me Foreword Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me (3rd ed.) Penguin Books Introduction to the 1966 novel by American author Richard Fariña (1937–1966), who had been Pynchon's friend and schoolmate at Cornell. [40]
1984 Introduction to Slow Learner Preface Slow Learner (1st ed.) Little, Brown An introduction to the collection of Pynchon's own early, previously published short stories.[5] In the 20-page preface, Pynchon reflects on the development of his writing, with autobiographical details that have made it a rare source of information about his life.[25] Though almost universally accepted as a work of nonfiction, the introduction has also been scrutinized as if it were a short story or a genre-ambiguous piece that may include elements of fiction.[41] [42]
Oct 28,
1984
"Is It O.K. to Be a Luddite?" Essay The New York Times Book Review The New York Times Essay advocating for neo-Luddism.[43] [40]
1988 Letter to Thomas F. Hirsch Letter The Fictional Labyrinths of Thomas Pynchon by David Seed Macmillan Press Hirsch, a graduate student, wrote to Pynchon about material in chapter 9 of V. related to historical South West Africa.[44] Pynchon replied to Hirsch in a letter dated January 8, 1969, which was published in 1988 as an appendix to The Fictional Labyrinths of Thomas Pynchon.[45] [46]
Apr 10,
1988
"The Heart's Eternal Vow" Review The New York Times Book Review The New York Times Review of the 1988 English-language translation of the novel Love in the Time of Cholera by Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez (1927–2014). [40]
Mar 12,
1989
"Words for Salman Rushdie" Letter The New York Times Book Review The New York Times "Words for Salman Rushdie" is a collection of open letters by "28 distinguished writers born in 21 countries" offering support to the British Indian author Salman Rushdie during the controversy against Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses (1988). The New York Times Book Review published the letters less than a month after Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa calling for the deaths of Rushdie and his publishers.[47] At 68 words, Pynchon's letter for Rushdie was one of his briefest published works.[48] [42]
1990 Letters to Corlies Smith Letter Of a Fond Ghoul The Blown Litter Press Corlies Smith (1929–2004) was the editor of Pynchon's first two novels at Lippincott.[49] In 1990, seven of Pynchon's letters to Smith—dated between August 31, 1961, and June 2, 1962—were published without permission in the book Of a Fond Ghoul.[50] These letters concern the editing process readying V. for publication.[51] The original copies were stolen from the offices of Harper & Row.[52] [53]
1992 Introduction to The Teachings of Don B. Foreword The Teachings of Don B. (1st ed.) Turtle Bay Introduction to a collection of writings by American author Donald Barthelme (1931–1989) edited by Kim Herzinger. [42]
Jun 6,
1993
"Nearer, My Couch, to Thee" Essay The New York Times Book Review The New York Times Essay on sloth in America. First entry in a summer-long series about the seven deadly sins by various writers. [42]
Apr
1994
Spiked! The Music of Spike Jones Liner notes Spiked! The Music of Spike Jones (CD compilation album) Catalyst/BMG Essay introducing the music of American bandleader Spike Jones (1911–1965), known for his satirical swing compositions and complex novelty arrangements. [54]
Mar
1996
[note 4]
Nobody's Cool Liner notes Nobody's Cool (studio album) by Lotion SpinART Records Essay introducing the album by the American alternative rock band Lotion. [42]
Jun
1996
"Lunch with Lotion" Interview Esquire Vol. 125, No. 6 Hearst Communications Pynchon interviews the members of American alternative rock band Lotion. [57]
1997 Introduction to Stone Junction Foreword Stone Junction: An Alchemical Potboiler (1st. pbk. ed.) Rebel Inc. (Edinburgh) Introduction to the first UK paperback edition of the 1990 novel by American author Jim Dodge (1945–). Pynchon had written a blurb for the dust jacket of the novel's hardcover first edition.[58] The following year, a US paperback edition with Pynchon's introduction was published by Grove Press (New York).[59] [60]
Jan
1999
"Hallowe'en? Over Already?" Essay Cathedral School Newsletter The Cathedral School of St. John the Divine, Manhattan Written when Pynchon's son, Jackson, was a second-grade student at the Cathedral School. The essay describes activities at the school during the fall of 1998, including a guided tour of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine.[61] [42]
2003 Introduction to Nineteen Eighty-Four Foreword Nineteen Eighty-Four (Centennial Edition) Plume Introduction to a new edition of the 1949 novel by English author George Orwell (1903–1950) marking the centenary of Orwell's birth. The edition also includes a 1961 afterword by German-American writer Erich Fromm (1900–1980). [62]
Nov 16,
2006
"The Evolution of The Daily Show" Essay The Daily Show: Ten Fu@#ing Years (The Concert) Irving Plaza (New York) Essay for the program of The Daily Show's Ten-Year Anniversary Concert at Irving Plaza on November 16, 2006. [42]
Dec 5,
2006
Letter to Dan Franklin at Jonathan Cape Letter The Daily Telegraph Telegraph Media Group Dan Franklin, then-director of the London publishing firm Jonathan Cape, solicited letters of support for English author Ian McEwan from prominent authors of historical fiction. McEwan had been accused of plagiarizing historical texts in his 2001 novel Atonement. Pynchon's letter was quoted in "The borrowers: 'why McEwan is no plagiarist'", an article by Nigel Reynolds in The Daily Telegraph.[63] Other authors who made statements in McEwan's defense included Martin Amis, Margaret Atwood, Thomas Keneally, Zadie Smith, and John Updike.[64] [65]

Boeing and the Bomarc Service News

Boeing employed Pynchon as a technical writer from February 22, 1960, to September 13, 1962.[66] During that time, only one technical article with Pynchon's byline appeared in print: the feature "Togetherness" in Aerospace Safety, a periodical published by the US Air Force rather than Boeing. While "Togetherness" is the only technical article that can be attributed to Pynchon with absolute certainty, it is extremely unlikely that he would have produced only one article during more than two years on the job.[67] As such, scholars have conducted research to identify articles that can plausibly be attributed to Pynchon based on biographical information and textual similarities.

Pynchon is known to have worked primarily as a staff writer for Boeing's Bomarc Service News, an in-house periodical related to development of the CIM-10 Bomarc surface-to-air missile.[note 5] However, definite attribution is impossible because the publication never used bylines. In 2000, Adrian Wisnicki compiled a list of 24 "probable" and 10 "possible" examples of Pynchon's writing in Bomarc Service News based on stylistic and thematic similarities to known works.[70] In 2019, Katie Muth used a stylometry-based authorship algorithm to identify eight Bomarc Service articles that were "closely correlated" with Pynchon's contemporaneous writing and four that were not.[71] Muth later claimed that, from the "handful" of Bomarc articles that could be reasonably attributed to Pynchon, two were "particularly" likely matches: "Torquing" (June 1960) and "The Mad Hatter and the Mercury Wetted Relays" (February 1962).[72]

It remains possible, yet uncertain and unlikely, that Pynchon contributed to other Boeing publications. A co-worker who personally knew the author recalled, years after the fact, that Pynchon had contributed to "the Minuteman Field Service News".[73] However, the company's support publication for the LGM-30 Minuteman—actually called the Minuteman Service News—launched two months after Pynchon is believed to have departed Boeing.[74] It is almost certain Pynchon did not contribute to The Boeing Magazine, as that publication included bylines on every article and never ran his name.[75]

Articles Pynchon may have written for Bomarc Service News
Date Title Probability of Pynchon's authorship,
according to...
Ref.
Wisnicki
2000–2001
Muth 2019a/b
Mar
1960
"Vibration Testing" Probable "Closely correlated" [76]
Apr
1960
"Weight Control" Probable N/A [77]
May
1960
"Missile Mockups" Probable N/A [77]
Jun
1960
"Torquing" Probable "Closely correlated" +
"particularly" likely
[78]
Jul
1960
"SCE Calibration" Probable N/A [77]
Sep
1960
"Package Handling" Probable N/A [77]
Oct
1960
"Analog Simulations" Probable Not correlated [79]
Oct
1960
"ANFA Hazard" Probable N/A [80]
Nov
1960
"1,000,000,000 = One Gigamile" Probable N/A [80]
Nov
1960
"Telemetering: Recovery, Recording, Reduction" Possible Not correlated [81]
Dec
1960
"Missile Sealants" Possible N/A [82]
Jan
1961
"Blame It on Osmosis" Possible N/A [82]
Mar
1961
"Separation Diaphragms" Probable N/A [80]
Apr
1961
"Maintainability, Part 2" Probable Not correlated [83]
Jun
1961
"Maintainability, Part 3" Probable N/A [80]
Jul
1961
"Of Astronauts and Acid" Possible N/A [82]
Jul
1961
"Records Prove Valuable" Possible N/A [82]
Aug
1961
"Soldering" Probable "Closely correlated" [84]
Sep
1961
"Maintainability, Part 4" Probable N/A [85]
Oct
1961
"Transporter-Loader Hoist Safety" Possible N/A [82]
Jan
1962
"Attention to Detail" Probable N/A [85]
Jan
1962
"IM-99B Flyaway Kits" Possible N/A [82]
Feb
1962
"'Teflon' in Depth" Probable Not correlated [84]
Feb
1962
"The Mad Hatter and the Mercury Wetted Relays" Probable "Closely correlated" +
"particularly" likely
[86]
Mar
1962
"A Blinding Flash" Possible N/A [82]
Mar
1962
"Vent Those Tanks!" Possible N/A [82]
Apr
1962
"MIU Plug Problems" Probable "Closely correlated" [81]
Jul
1962
"Environmental Protection" Probable "Closely correlated" [81]
Aug
1962
"The Trouble with Safety Is... People!" Probable "Closely correlated" [81]
Sep
1962
"Hydrazine Tank Cartridge Replacement" Probable "Closely correlated" [81]
Oct
1962
"Bomarc Reliability and You" Probable N/A [87]
Oct
1962
"Safety Devices?" Possible N/A [82]

Misattributed and disputed works

  • In 1990, Bruce Anderson, the editor of the Anderson Valley Advertiser, claimed that Thomas Pynchon authored letters sent to the Mendocino Commentary and AVA between 1983 and 1988 under the name of Wanda Tinasky. In 1994 this was followed by Fred Gardner research and then, in 1996, by a book by TR Factor entitled The Letters of Wanda Tinasky, supporting the claim of Pynchon authorship. The Pynchon connection was denied by Pynchon's agent, Melanie Jackson. In 1998 Don Foster named an obscure Beat poet and writer, Tom Hawkins, as the author of the letters. This led to further research by Factor proving that Hawkins had authored the Tinasky letters.
  • Pynchon's name was signed to the liner notes of Barefoot in the Head, a 1990 studio album by noise musicians Jim Sauter, Don Dietrich, and Thurston Moore. Pynchon's agent denied his authorship.[88] The misattribution was a prank.[89] The true author is unknown. Tim Ware, a musician and Pynchon enthusiast, suggested that the notes had mostly likely been written by Byron Coley, a music critic affiliated with Moore's band Sonic Youth.[88]
  • In January 2002, Playboy Japan published a purported interview with Pynchon conducted by Japanese journalist Motokazu Ohno.[note 6] If authentic, it represents Pynchon's first and only sustained interview with the press, breaking four decades of media silence. In the interview, Pynchon expressed doubt about the existence of Osama bin Laden (more specifically, Pynchon said bin Laden was "someone's clown for a rodeo" and should be understood "as a symbol rather than a man"), criticized American media coverage of the September 11 attacks, and sarcastically recommended investing in the tobacco industry due to the national mood of heightened anxiety.[92]
Pynchon's agent "disavowed" the interview.[28] Its authenticity is generally regarded as dubious.[93] Literary scholar Paolo Simonetti labeled the interview "unreliable" and "probably fake", noting that although the questioning of bin Laden's existence was "typically Pynchonian" in style and substance, it remained "unlikely that the author would have expressed it plainly in an interview."[94] Pynchon later incorporated the topic of 9/11 conspiracy theories into the plot of his 2013 novel Bleeding Edge.[95]
  • Rumors that Pynchon had secretly written the 2015 Cow Country—published by a small press under the pseudonym Adrian Jones Pearson—led to a significant increase in the book's sales.[96] Art Winslow, a critic and former editor at The Nation, pitched the theory of Pynchon's authorship five months after the novel's release in Harper's Magazine.[97] It was denied by Pynchon's agent and his publisher, Penguin Books. Steven Moore, a critic who had blurbed Cow Country after becoming acquainted with its real author, also denied Pynchon's involvement. Several Pynchon scholars criticized Winslow's analysis as implausible.[98] According to an investigation by journalist Alex Shephard, the true author of Cow Country is probably a writer named A. J. Perry.[96]

Notes

  1. In the introduction to Slow Learner, Pynchon set the title as "The Crying of Lot 49"—within double quotation marks, rather than italics—and described it as a "story" that had been "marketed as a 'novel'".[2]
  2. A modified adaptation of "Under the Rose" became the third chapter of V. Critics have variously treated "Under the Rose" as a "pre- or meta-text" to V., or as a distinct work with an intertextual relationship to the novel.[9]
  3. Black Humor was an anthology edited by Bruce Jay Friedman and published by Bantam.[10]
  4. According to some sources, Nobody's Cool was released in 1995.[55] While the copyright registration for the album was dated 1995, it was not actually released until March 1996.[56]
  5. Shortly after Pynchon won the William Faulkner Foundation Award for V., Kenneth Calkins—editor of the internal newsletter Boeing News—noted Pynchon had written for Bomarc Service News.[68] E. A. Hixson, a former editor of Bomarc Service News, later confirmed that Pynchon had been on the publication's staff during his editorship.[69]
  6. Citations to the Playboy Japan interview are sometimes dated December 2001, or inconsistently dated either December 2001 or January 2002.[90] According to the cumulative bibliography maintained by the journal Pynchon Notes, the correct date of the Playboy Japan interview is January 2002.[91]

References

Citations

  1. Mead 1989, p. 5.
  2. Pynchon 1984, p. 22.
  3. Mead 1989, p. 9.
  4. Mead 1989, p. 13.
  5. Mead 1989, p. 15.
  6. Freer 2019, p. vii.
  7. Mead 1989, p. 19.
  8. Mead 1989, p. 21.
  9. Amian 2008, pp. 82–83.
  10. Mead 1989, p. 23.
  11. Mead 1989, p. 25.
  12. Mead 1989, pp. 19, 157–158.
  13. Mead 1989, pp. 19, 158–160.
  14. Mead 1989, pp. 19, 160–161.
  15. Mead 1989, pp. 19, 163.
  16. Mead 1989, pp. 19, 163–166.
  17. Mead 1989, pp. 19, 166–167.
  18. Harle 2019, pp. 16–18.
  19. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 10.
  20. Duyfhuizen & Krafft 1996, p. 178.
  21. Mead 1989, pp. 22–23; Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 10–12.
  22. Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 14, 25–29.
  23. Muth 2019b, pp. 23, 28 (fn. 1).
  24. Moore 1984, p. 84.
  25. Weisenburger 1990, p. 693 (fn. 3).
  26. Rolls 2019, pp. 16, 21 (fn. 7).
  27. Moore 1984, pp. 84–85; Mead 1989, p. 23.
  28. Krafft 2019, p. 10.
  29. Dunlap 2015.
  30. Mead 1989, pp. 25–26.
  31. Balint 2018, p. 24.
  32. Mead 1989, p. 25; Balint 2018, p. 24.
  33. Rolls 2019, p. 15.
  34. Mead 1989, p. 25; Rolls 2019, pp. 15, 21 (fn. 2).
  35. Alexander 1999, p. 254.
  36. Tanner 1982, p. 18; Alexander 1999, pp. 254–255.
  37. Alexander 1999, p. 255.
  38. Alexander 1999, pp. 255–256.
  39. Mead 1989, pp. 25, 27.
  40. Mead 1989, p. 27.
  41. McHoul & Wills 1990, pp. 133–135; Krafft 2019, p. 9 ("Many reviewers celebrated this introduction for being surprisingly forthcoming, but other readers see it as a carefully guarded performance, almost as if it were another short story"); Kolbuszewska 2019, pp. 281, 286 (fn. 1, citing McHoul & Wills 1990).
  42. Dalsgaard 2019, p. 362.
  43. Jones 2006, p. 207.
  44. Seed 1988, p. 240.
  45. Seed 1988, pp. 240–243.
  46. Seed 1988, pp. 240–243; Mead 1989, p. 27
  47. Perchard 2016, p. 476.
  48. Muth 2019b, p. 23.
  49. McGrath 2004.
  50. Herman & Krafft 2006, p. 261 (fn. 1) (noting that Of a Fond Ghoul was "unauthorized"); Dalsgaard 2019, pp. 362–363 (providing the number and dates of the letters in Of a Fond Ghoul).
  51. Rolls 2019, pp. 19, 22 (fn. 20).
  52. Herman & Krafft 2006, p. 261 (fn. 1).
  53. Dalsgaard 2019, pp. 362–363.
  54. Dryden n.d.; Dalsgaard 2019, p. 362.
  55. See, e.g., Strong 1999, p. 375; Duyfhuizen & Krafft 1996, p. 177.
  56. Pynchon 1996, p. 86 ("releasing ... their second CD, Nobody's Cool, in March '96"); Dalsgaard 2019, p. 362 (noting the 1995 copyright but 1996 release).
  57. Duyfhuizen & Krafft 1996, pp. 178, 200; Pynchon 1996, pp. 84–88, 90.
  58. Padgett et al. 1995–1997.
  59. Cowart 2011, p. 233.
  60. Dalsgaard, Herman & McHale 2012, p. 178.
  61. Rolls 2013, p. 1.
  62. Deery 2005, p. 122.
  63. Dalsgaard 2019, p. 364.
  64. Reynolds 2006.
  65. Reynolds 2006; Dalsgaard 2019, p. 364.
  66. Muth 2019b, p. 474.
  67. Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 10–12.
  68. Muth 2019a, pp. 473–474.
  69. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 14.
  70. Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 25–29.
  71. Muth 2019a, pp. 480, 490 (fn. 29), 492–493.
  72. Muth 2019b, p. 29 (fn. 25).
  73. Cowart 1980, pp. 96–97.
  74. Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 12–14.
  75. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 12.
  76. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 25; Muth 2019a, p. 480.
  77. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 25.
  78. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 25; Muth 2019a, p. 480; Muth 2019b, p. 25 (fn. 29).
  79. Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 25–26; Muth 2019a, p. 480.
  80. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 26.
  81. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 28; Muth 2019a, p. 480.
  82. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 29.
  83. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 26; Muth 2019a, p. 480.
  84. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 27; Muth 2019a, p. 480.
  85. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 27.
  86. Wisnicki 2000–2001, pp. 27–28; Muth 2019a, p. 480; Muth 2019b, p. 25 (fn. 29).
  87. Wisnicki 2000–2001, p. 28.
  88. Ware 2018.
  89. Masters 2013.
  90. See, e.g., Simonetti 2011, pp. 37 (fn. 1), 40 (using both dates within the same article); compare Krafft 2019 and Muth 2019b (using inconsistent dates in different chapters of the same book).
  91. Krafft 2000–2001, p. 275.
  92. Simonetti 2011, p. 37 (fn. 1); Krafft 2019, p. 10.
  93. Simonetti 2011, pp. 27, 37 (fn. 1); Konstantinou 2013–2014, p. 171.
  94. Simonetti 2011, pp. 27, 37 (fn. 1).
  95. Konstantinou 2013–2014, p. 171.
  96. Shephard 2015.
  97. Winslow 2015.
  98. Alter 2015.

Sources

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