Bunyan bibliography (1988-2020)

Compiled by Galen K. Johnson, Tabatha Raiees-Dana, Sarah Cory and David Parry.

The 1988–2008 section was published in Bunyan Studies, Vol. 13 (2008–2009) and the 2009 and 2010 sections were published in The Recorder (2010 and 2011). Reproduced with permission. Bunyan bibliographies from 2016-2020 can be found in the annual and corresponding issues of The Recorder. They are updated every year.

Download a pdf of the Bibliography here: bunyan-bibliography-october-2016-version.

Scholarly Editions of Bunyan’s Works

Bunyan, John. Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. Ed. W. R. Owens. Penguin Classics. New York: Penguin Books, 1987, reprint 2006.

Bunyan, John. Grace Abounding with Other Spiritual Autobiographies. Oxford World’s Classics. Ed. John Stachniewski with Anita Pacheco. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.

Bunyan, John. The Holy War: Annotated Companion to The Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. Daniel V. Runyon. Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, 2012.

Bunyan, John. The Life and Death of Mr. Badman. Ed. Roger Sharrock and James F. Forrest. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988.

Bunyan, John. The Life and Death of Mr. Badman, with foreword by James Fenton. London: Hesperus Classics, 2007.

Bunyan, John. The Miscellaneous Works of John Bunyan, volume IV: A Defence of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith; A Confession of my Faith, and a Reason of my Practice; Differences in Judgment about Water-baptism, no Bar to Communion; Peaceable Principles and True; A Case of Conscience Resolved; Questions About the Nature and Perpetuity of the Seventh-day Sabbath. Ed. T. L. Underwood. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.

Bunyan, John. The Miscellaneous Works of John Bunyan, volume VII: Solomon’s Temple Spiritualized; The House of the Forest of Lebanon; The Water of Life. Ed. Graham Midgley. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.

Bunyan, John. The Miscellaneous Works of John Bunyan, volume X: Seasonable Counsel; A Discourse Upon the Pharisee and the Publicane. Ed. Owen C. Watkins. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988.

Bunyan, John. The Miscellaneous Works of John Bunyan, volume XII: The Acceptable Sacrifice; Last Sermon; An Exposition on the Ten First Chapters of Genesis; Of Justification By an Imputed Righteousness; Paul’s Departure and Crown; Of the Trinity and a Christian; Of the Law and a Christian; A Mapp Shewing the Order & Causes of Salvation & Damnation. Ed. W. R. Owens. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.

Bunyan, John. The Miscellaneous Works of John Bunyan, volume XIII: Israel’s Hope Encouraged; The Desire of the Righteous Granted; The Saints Privilege and Profit; Christ a Compleat Saviour; The Saints Knowledge of Christ’s Love; Of Antichrist, and His Ruine. Ed. W. R. Owens. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.

Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress. Afterword by F. R. Leavis. Signet Classics. New York: Signet Classics, reprint, 1991.

Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. N. H. Keeble. Oxford World’s Classics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991.

Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. Stuart Sim. Wordsworth Classics of World Literature. London: Wordsworth, 1996.

Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens. Oxford World’s Classics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. Roger Pooley. Penguin Classics. London and New York:  Penguin Books, 2008.

Bunyan, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. Cynthia Wall. Norton Critical Edition. New York and London: W. W. Norton, 2009

Reprints of Editions of Bunyan’s Works

Bunyan, John.  The Pilgrim’s Progress, and Other Select Works, of John Bunyan, with Preface and Memoir of the Author.  Green Forest, AR: New Leaf Press, reprint 2005.

Bunyan, John.  The Riches of Bunyan: Selections from the Writings of John Bunyan.  Ed. Ellyn Sanna.  Uhrichsville, OH: Barbour Publishing Company, 1998.

Bunyan, John.  With Rhyme and Reason: The Collected Poems, Songs and Prayers of John Bunyan.  Sydney: Broad Churchman Series, 1993.

Bunyan, John.  The Works of John Bunyan, 3 volumes.  Ed. George Offor.  Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, reprint 1991.

Duke, Roger D., and Phil A. Newton, eds. “Venture All for God”: The Piety of John Bunyan. [Selections from Bunyan.] Grand Rapids: Reformation Heritage Books, 2011.

 Translations of Bunyan’s Works

Bunyan, John. Le Voyage du pèlerin, de ce monde à celui qui doit venir. Translated by S. Maerky-Richard. (French translation of The Pilgrim’s Progress.) In Voyages aux pays de nulle part. Ed. Francis Lacassin, 507–747. Paris: Laffont, 1990.

Bunyan, John.  Douhovnata voyna.  Translated by Vladimir Raychinov.  (Bulgarian translation of The Holy War).  Sofia, Bulgaria: Nov Chovek, 2010.

Bunyan, John.  Puteshestvenikut ot tozi sviat do onzi.  Translated by Vladimir Raychinov.  (Bulgarian translation of The Pilgrim’s Progress).  Sofia, Bulgaria: Nov Chovek, 2010.

 Secondary Literature

A

Aaron, Melissa. “‘Christiana and her train’: Bunyan and the Alternative Society in the Second Part of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 169–185. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Achinstein, Sharon. “Honey from the Lion’s Carcass: Bunyan, Allegory, and the Samsonian Movement.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 51–67. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Achinstein, Sharon. Literature and Dissent in Milton’s England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Achinstein, Sharon. “John Bunyan and the Politics of Remembrance.” In Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan. Ed. Vera J. Camden, 135–152. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.

Acker, Elizabeth Anne, “Knowing the Holy: Sanctification and Identity in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Literature.” Ph.D. diss., University of Tennessee, 2012.

Adams, Byron. “To be a Pilgrim: A Meditation on Vaughan Williams and Religion.” Journal of the RVW Society 33 (June 2005): 4–6.

Adams, Robert M. Review of A Tinker and a Poor Man: John Bunyan and His Church, 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill. New York Review of Books 36:3 (2 March 1989): 27–28.

Adams, Stephen M. “Bunyan, John.” In Encyclopedia of Life Writing: Autobiographical and Biographical Forms. Ed. Margaretta Jolly, 158–160. Chicago/London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001.

Adamson, Sylvia. “From Empathetic Deixis to Empathetic Narrative: Stylisation and (De)subjectivisation as Processes of Language Change.” In Subjectivity and Subjectivisation: Linguistic Perspectives. Ed. Dieter Stein and Susan Wright, 195–224. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.

Aguirre, Manuel. “The Evolution of Dreams.” Neohelicon 17:2 (September 1990): 9–26. [Compares the treatment of dreams in the writings of Bunyan and the Spanish writer Pedro Calderón de la Barca.]

Ahenakaa, Anjov. “Justification and the Christian Life: A Vindication of Bunyan from the Charge of Antinomianism.” Ph.D. diss., Westminster Theological Seminary, 1997.

Aikin, Lucy. The Pilgrim’s Progress Primer. Ames, Iowa: International Outreach, 1999.

Alblas, Jacques B. H. “The Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress in Holland during the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries.” In Bunyan in England and Abroad. Ed. M. van Os and G. J. Schutte, 121–132. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1990.

Alblas, Jacques B. H. “An Unknown Early Edition of Bunyan’s Eens Christens Reyse (Utrecht, Willem and Abraham van Paddenburgh, 1685).” Quaerendo 20:3 (1990): 220–222.

Alblas, Jacques B. H. “The Bunyan Collection of the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam.” Bunyan Studies 6 (1995/96): 78–84.

Alexander, J. H. “Christ in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 1:2 (Spring 1989): 22–29.

Alff, David. “Why No One Can Mend the Slough of Despond.” The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation 54:3 (Fall 2013): 375–392.

Allen, Diogenes. “The Rehabilitation of Pilgrim’s Progress.” Perspectives in Religious Studies 27:1 (Spring 2000): 99–112.

Amer, Enas Subhi, and Mayada Zuhair Al-Khafaji. “A Thematic Reading of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress with Introductory References to Islam in English Literature.” Al-Mansour Journal 22 (2014): 125–151.

Archer, Robert. “Little Flowers in the Garden: John Bunyan and His Concept of the Church.” Baptist Quarterly 36:6 (April 1996): 280–293.

Arneson, Nancy. Review of John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding and The Pilgrim’s Progress: An Overview of Literary Studies, 1960–1987, by E. Beatrice Batson. Evangelical Quarterly 61 (July 1989): 286–288.

Arneson, Nancy. Review of John Bunyan’s “Grace Abounding” and “The Pilgrim’s Progress”: An Overview of Literary Studies, 1960–1987, by Beatrice Batson; Bunyan in Our Time, ed. Robert G. Collmer; and John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus: Tercentenary Essays, ed. N. H. Keeble. Religion and Literature 23:1 (Spring 1991): 81–86.

Aukeman, Renee Alida. “The Multiple Roles of the Roll in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Dulia et Latria Journal 1 (2008): 65–79.

Austin, Michael. “The Figural Logic of the Sequel and the Unity of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Studies in Philology 102:04 (Fall 2005): 484–509.

Austin, Michael. “Bunyan’s Book of Ruth: The Typological Structure of the Seventeenth-Century Debate on Women in the Church.” In Religion in the Age of Reason: A Transatlantic Study of the Long Eighteenth Century. Ed. Kathryn Duncan, 83–96. New York, NY: AMS, 2009.

Austin, Michael. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera Camden. Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660–1700 33:1 (Spring 2009): 59–61.

Austin, Michael. New Testaments: Cognition, Closure, and the Figural Logic of the Sequel, 1660–1740. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2011.

Avery, Kevin J. “The Panorama and its Manifestation in American Landscape Painting, 1795–1870.” Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1995.

Aylmer, Gerald. Review of John Bunyan and His England, 1628–1688, ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim. History Today 4:2 (February 1991): 60–61.

B

Baker, Naomi. “Grace and Favour: Deconstructing Hospitality in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” The Seventeenth Century 27:2 (Summer 2012): 183–211.

Balla, Peter. “The Pilgrim’s Progress in the Context of Bunyan’s Era.” Review of Grace Overwhelming: John Bunyan, The Pilgrim’s Progress and the Extremes of the Baptist Mind by Anne Dunan-Page. Expository Times 119:7 (April 2008): 339.

Barbour, Hugh. “The ‘Openings’ of Fox and Bunyan.” In New Light on George Fox, 1634–1691. Ed. Michael Mullett, 129–143. York: William Sessions, Ebor Press, 1993.

Baruth, Philip Edward. “Positioning the (Auto)Biographical Subject: Ideological Fictions of Self in Boswell, Johnson, and John Bunyan.” Ph.D. diss., University of California, Irvine, 1993.

Baseotto, Paola. “Theology and Interiority: Emotions as Evidence of the Working of Grace in Elizabethan and Stuart Conversion Narratives.” In A History of Emotions, 1200–1800. Ed. Jonas Liliequist, 65–77. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012.

Bates, Linda. “Christ’s Presence through Anamnesis in Seventeenth-Century Nonconformist Writing.” Postgraduate English 13 (2006). Electronic publication, accessible at <http://community.dur.ac.uk/postgraduate.english/ojs/index.php/pgenglish/article/view/52>.

Batson, E. Beatrice. John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding and The Pilgrim’s Progress: An Overview of Literary Studies, 1960–1987. New York: Garland, 1988.

Batson, E. Beatrice. The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan (Macmillan Master Guides series). Basingstoke: Macmillan Education, 1988.

Batson, E. Beatrice. “The Artistry of John Bunyan’s Sermons.” American Baptist Quarterly 7:4 (December 1988): 484–495.

Battista, Fabio. “Spiritual Autobiography in Seventeenth-Century England, 1654–1678.” M.A. thesis, Sapienza Università di Roma, 2012.

Battista, Fabio. “Spiritual Autobiography in Seventeenth-Century England. Trends in Literary History and Criticism, 1948–2012.” Status Quaestionis 3 (2012): 155–180.

Batycki, Donna M. F. “Reveiling and Revealing: Renaissance Poetry and the Mode of Allegory.” Ph.D. diss., University of Calgary, 1992.

Bauer, Matthias. “Bunyan and the Physiognomy of the Wor(l)d.” In Signergy. Eds. C. Jac Conradie, Ronél Johl, Marthinus Beukes, Olga Fischer, and Christina Ljundberg, 193–210. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2010.

Bear, Bethany Joy. “Fantastical Faith: John Bunyan and the Sanctification of Fancy.” Studies in Philology, 109:5 (Fall 2012): 671–701.

Beeke, Joel R. “John Bunyan.” In Meet the Puritans: With a Guide to Modern Reprints. Ed. Joel R. Beeke and Randall J. Pederson, 101–112. Grand Rapids: Reformation Heritage Books, 2006.

Beeke, Joel R. “John Bunyan on Justification.” Midwestern Journal of Theology 10:1 (2011): 166–189.

Beeke, Joel R. “John Bunyan on Justification.” Puritan Reformed Journal 5:2 (July 2013): 107–130.

Beeke, Joel R. “Bunyan’s Perseverance.” In The Pure Flame of Devotion: The History of Christian Spirituality. Eds. G. Stephen Weaver Jr. and Ian Hugh Clary, 323–341. Kitchener, Ontario, Canada: Joshua Press, 2013.

Beeke, Joel R. “John Bunyan’s Preaching to the Heart.” In A Puritan Theology: Doctrine for Life. Ed. Joel R. Beeke and Mark Jones, 711–724. Grand Rapids: Reformation Heritage Books, 2014.

Beeke, Joel, and Paul Smalley. Prepared by Grace, for Grace: The Puritans on God’s Way of Leading Sinners to Christ. Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2013. Especially chapter 11, “Later Puritan Preparation: Flavel and Bunyan,” 177–200.

Beeke, Joel R., and Paul M. Smalley. John Bunyan and the Grace of Fearing God. Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2016.

Bell, Patricia. “Thomas Bunyan and Mr. Badman.” Bunyan Studies 2:1 (Spring 1990): 46–52.

Bell, Patricia. “Agnes Beaumont of Edworth.” Baptist Quarterly 35:1 (January 1993): 3–17.

Bell, Patricia. “Agnes Beaumont of Edworth.” Bunyan Studies 10 (2001/2002): 7–28.

Bell, Robert H. The Rise of Autobiography in the Eighteenth Century: Ten Experiments in Literary Genre – Augustine, Bunyan, Rousseau, Locke, Hume, Franklin, Gibbon, Sterne, Fielding, Boswell. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 2012.

“Bellringing Fear Knocks Latter-day Bunyans Off Feet.” The Australian (5 July 2005): 8.

Belmonte, Kevin Charles. John Bunyan. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2010.

Bender, Kimlyn J. “The Church as a Pilgrim People: The Communio Viatorum of the Risen and Ascended Christ.”American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 326–346.

Bennett, Arthur. Review of John Bunyan, by Frank Mott Harrison. Churchman 103:4 (1989): 363–364.

Bennett, Arthur. Calvary’s Hill: The Cross in the Pilgrim’s Progress. East Molesey: Avon, 1994.

Bensick, Carol M. “Hawthorne and His Bunyan.” Nathaniel Hawthorne Review 19:2 (Spring 1993): 1–10.

Berger, Benjamin Lyle. “Calvinism and the Problem of Suspense in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 8 (1998): 28–35.

Bernet, Claus. “The Pilgrim’s Progress” von John Bunyan (Meisterwerke des Himmlischen Jerusalem series). Berlin: Edition Graugans/Books on Demand, 2015.

Bertrandias, Bernadette. “La Porte secrete de l’enfer: Jane Eyre ou l’aporie du Pilgrim’s Progress?” Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens: Revue du Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches Victoriennes et Edouardiennes de l’Université Paul Valéry 55:17 (April 2002): 157–167.

Bertsch, Janet. Storytelling in the Works of Bunyan, Grimmelshausen, Defoe and Schnabel. Columbia, S.C.: Camden House, 2004.

Betteridge, Thomas. “Vernacular Theology.” In Cultural Reformations: Medieval and Renaissance in Literary History. Ed. Brian Cummings and James Simpson, 188–205. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010.

Biggers, Shirley Hoover. British Author House Museums and Other Memorials: A Guide to Sites in England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2002. Chapter 4, “John Bunyan,” 57–70.

Blakely, Colin. Great Christian Thinkers: A Beginner’s Guide to Over 70 Leading Theologians through the Ages. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 2000.

Blondel, Jacques. “La Bible de Bunyan.” In Le Grand Siècle et la Bible. Ed. Jean-Robert Armogathe, 581–596. Paris: Beauchesne, 1989.

Bloom, Donald A. “The Idea of Despair in Four Protestant Authors: Spenser, Milton, Bunyan, and Richardson.” Shakespeare and Renaissance Association of West Virginia: Selected Papers 13 (Spring 1988): 66–72.

Bloom, Harold. John Bunyan. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1988.

Bloom, Harold, and Blake Hobby, eds. Bloom’s Literary Themes: Sin and Redemption. New York: Chelsea House/Bloom’s Literary Criticism, 2010.

Blyth, Thomas Allen. Memoir of John Jukes Senior Pastor of Bunyan’s Church, Bedford. London: General Books, reprint 2010.

Bøe, Kari Anne. “The Self and Perception of Reality in John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress and C. S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce.” Master’s thesis, University of Oslo, 2012.

Bögels, Theo. Review of Johannes Boekholt (1656–1693): The First Dutch Publisher of John Bunyan and Other English Authors, by J. B. H. Alblas. English Studies 70 (3 June 1989): 272–274.

Bogue, David, and James Bennett. History of Dissenters: From the Revolution to the Year 1838: In Three Volumes. Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire: Tentmaker Publications, 2000.

Borck, Jim Springer. Review of The Life and Death of Mr. Badman, by John Bunyan, ed. Roger Sharrock and James F. Forrest. Review 12 (1990): 205–211.

Borgogni, Daniele. “Emblems, Emblematics and the Reader in The Pilgrim’s Progress. Textus 11:1 (January–June 1998): 99–118.

Boscaljon, Daniel. “Possibilities of Redemption through the Novel.” In The Oxford Handbook of English Literature and Theology. Ed. Andrew Hass, David Jasper, and Elisabeth Jay, 760–775. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

Boscaljon, Daniel. “Secularization and the Loss of Love in Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” Religions 4:4 (December 2013): 669–686.

Bossy, John. “One More Allegory: Review of A Turbulent, Seditious, and Factious People: John Bunyan and his Church 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill.” Bunyan Studies 2:1 (Spring 1990): 73–80.

Bradburn, Elizabeth. “1620–1700: Mind on the Move.” In The Emergence of Mind: Representations of Consciousness in Narrative Discourse in English. Ed. David Herman, 132–158. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2011.

Bradley, Maureen L. The Pilgrim’s Progress Study Guide. Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1994.

Bradstock, Andrew. “John Bunyan.” In The Blackwell Companion to the Bible in English Literature. Ed. Rebecca Lemon, Emma Mason, Jonathan Roberts, and Christopher Rowland, 286–296. Oxford/Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

Branch, Lori. Rituals of Spontaneity: Sentiment and Secularism from Free Prayer to Wordsworth. Waco: Baylor University Press, 2006.

Branch, Lori. “‘As Blood is Forced Out of Flesh:’ Spontaneity and the Wounds of Exchange in ‘Grace Abounding’ and ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress.’” ELH 74:2 (Summer 2007): 271–299.

Branch, Lori. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera J. Camden. The Scriblerian 44:2/45:1 (Spring-Autumn 2012): 130–131.

Bray, Gerald L. “Prayer in the English Reformation.” Reformed Theological Review 71:3 (December 2012): 153–169.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. “The Sexed Pilgrim’s Progress.” SEL: Studies in English Literature 32:3 (Summer 1992): 443–460.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. “The Heroine’s Progress: Configurations of Female Bildung from John Bunyan to Jane Rule.” Ph.D. diss. Rutgers University, 1993.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. “Christiana’s Rudeness: Spiritual Authority in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 7 (1997): 96–111.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. “Narrative Inversion: The Biblical Heritage of The Well of Loneliness and Desert of the Heart.” Journal of Homosexuality 33:3–4 (1997): 187–206. Simultaneously published in Reclaiming the Sacred: The Bible in Gay and Lesbian Culture. Ed. Raymond-Jean Frontain, 187–206. New York and London: Harrington Park Press, 1997. Revised version in Reclaiming the Sacred: The Bible in Gay and Lesbian Culture, 2nd edition. Ed. Raymond-Jean Frontain, 187–208. New York and London: Harrington Park Press, 2003; reprinted by Routledge, 2011.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. “Desert of the Heart: Jane Rule’s Puritan Outing.” In The Puritan Origins of American Sex: Religion, Sexuality, and Narrative Identity in American Literature. Eds. Tracy Fessenden, Nicholas F. Radel, and Magdalena J. Zaborowska, 235–252. New York: Routledge, 2000.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. Review of Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community, ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck. The Recorder 7 (2001): 17–19.

Breen, Margaret Soenser. Review of The Key in the Window: Marginal Notes in Bunyan’s Narratives, by Maxine Hancock. The Recorder 8 (2002): 13–14.

Breen, Margaret Sönser. “Writing Sexuality: Lesbian Novels and the Progress Narrative.” In Narratives of Queer Desire: Deserts of the Heart (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009): 8–41.

Breen, Margaret Sönser. “‘John Bunyan: Conscience, History, and Justice’ – The Seventh Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society, Princeton University, USA, 12–16 August 2013.” Bunyan Studies 17 (2013): 152–155. Reprinted in The Recorder 20 (Spring 2014): 10–12.

Breen, Margaret Sönser. “The Pilgrim’s Art of Failure and Belonging – Dialogues between Bunyan and Queer Studies.” Bunyan Studies 18 (2014): 61–77.

Bremer, Francis J., ed. Puritanism: Transatlantic Perspectives on a Seventeenth-Century Anglo-American Faith. Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society/Northeastern University Press, 1993.

Breslin, Stephen L. “Blake and Allegory.” Ph.D. diss., State University of New York at Buffalo, 2004.

Breward, Ian. John Bunyan (1628–1688): A Commemorative Symposium, 20 August 1988, Ormond College, University of Melbourne. Melbourne: Uniting Church Historical Society, 1988.

Broomhall, Ruth. “Christian’s Burden as Symbolic Representation of Sin – Outmoded Theology or Timeless, Spiritual Necessity? Part One: Bunyan in Context – Puritan England and the Burden of Sin.” International Congregational Journal 13:2 (Winter 2014): 77–97

Broomhall, Ruth. “Christian’s Burden as Symbolic Representation of Sin: Outmoded Theology or Timeless, Spiritual Necessity? Part Two: Bunyan, Contemporary Culture and the ‘Burden’ of Shame.” International Congregational Journal 14:1 (Summer 2015): 71–95.

Broomhall, Ruth J. The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Curriculum for Schools. Bedford: Palace Beautiful, 2016.

Brown, John. John Bunyan: His Life, Times and Work. London: Hodder & Stoughton, reprint 1994.

Brown, John. “John Bunyan’s Preaching.” Founders Journal 7 (Winter 1992): 4–5.

Brown, John. Puritan Preaching in England: A Study of Past and Present. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock Publishers, reprint 2001.

Brown, Kathy. “The Pilgrim’s Path: Sources from Stevington.” The Recorder 13 (2007): 6–10. Reprinted in Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from The Recorder, 1999–2008. Ed. Ken Simpson, 69–77. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

Brown, Raymond. “Bedfordshire Nonconformist Devotion: Another Look at the Agnes Beaumont Story (1674).” Baptist Quarterly 35:7 (July 1994): 310–323.

Brown, Raymond. Four Spiritual Giants. Eastbourne: Kingsway, 1997.

Brown, Raymond. Giants of the Faith: Classic Christian Writings and the Men Behind Them. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1998.

Brown, Raymond. Spirituality in Adversity: English Non-Conformity in a Period of Repression, 1660–1689. Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2012.

Brown, Richard Danson. “Everyman’s Progresses: Louis MacNeice’s Dialogues with Bunyan.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 147–164. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

Brown, Sylvia. “The Reproductive Word: Gender and Textuality in the Writings of John Bunyan.” Bunyan Studies 11 (2003/2004): 23–45.

Brown, Sylvia. Review of The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Isabel Hofmeyr. The Recorder 11 (2005): 8–9.

Brunson, Richard. “Some Thoughts on The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Journal of the RVW Society 38 (March 2007): 14–17.

Budde, Carolin. “The Pilgrim’s Progress, Parts I and II, and the Sense of Audience.” A.L.M. thesis, Harvard University, 1988.

The Bunyan Collection in the Library of the Vrije Universiteit: An Offprint from the Alphabetical Catalogue. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit, The Library, Department of Old Books and Manuscripts, 1988.

Burke, Mary. “‘Of that Rank that is Meanest and Most Despised of All:’ Victorian Romany Studies and the Recovery of John Bunyan’s ‘Gypsy’ Origins.” In “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Special Feature,” in 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 13. Ed. Ken Simpson, 245–263. New York: AMS Press, 2006.

Burke, Peter. “The Rhetoric of Autobiography in the Seventeenth Century.” In Touching the Past: Studies in the Historical Sociolinguistics of Ego-Documents. Ed. Marijke J. van der Wal and Gijsbert Rutten, 149–163. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Benjamins, 2013.

Burns, Daniel. “Disgraceful Materialism, Secularisation, and Mediation in John Bunyan’s The Life and Death of Mr. Badman.” Honors thesis, Australian Defence Force Academy, 1988.

C

Cahill, Mary, Andy Halpin, Carol Smith, and Stephen d’Arcy. “‘Have you tried the ash pit?’ Excavating Magic in Fairview.” The Recorder 20 (Spring 2014): 16–22.

Calhoun, David B. Grace Abounding: The Life, Books and Influence of John Bunyan. Fearn, Scotland: Christian Focus, 2005.

Callis, Jonathan P. “Reading the Mind: Renaissance Allegory and Lockean Psychology in Eighteenth-Century English Literature.” Ph.D. diss., University of Notre Dame, 2015. Especially Chapter 3, “Allegorical Incorporation and the Problems of Peace in John Bunyan’s The Holy War,” 66–115.

Camden, Vera J. “Blasphemy and Belief in Grace Abounding.” American Baptist Quarterly 7:4 (December 1988): 460–471.

Camden, Vera J. “Blasphemy and the Problem of the Self in Grace Abounding.” Bunyan Studies 1:2 (Spring 1989): 5–21.

Camden, Vera J., ed. The Narrative of the Persecutions of Agnes Beaumont. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1992.

Camden, Vera J. “‘Most Fit for a Wounded Conscience:’ The Place of Luther’s ‘Commentary on Galatians’ in Grace Abounding.” Renaissance Quarterly 50:3 (Autumn 1997): 819–849.

Camden, Vera J. “‘That of Esau:’ The Place of Hebrews xii. 16, 17 in Grace Abounding.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 133–164. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

Camden, Vera J. Review of Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 125–127.

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Campbell, Julie. “‘A Mighty Maze of Walks:’ Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress and Beckett’s Molloy.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 165–184. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

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Choi, Jaemin. “John Bunyan as a Dissenter – A Study of Dissenting Literature in the Restoration.” Medieval and Early Modern English Studies 22:1 (2014): 121–141.

Chong, Kenneth. “Enchanting the Reader in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 70–87.

Christensen, Jaquelyn. “A Pilgrim’s Progression in Representation: John Bunyan’s Use of Image, Word, and Imagination.” Inscape 21:2 (2001): 95–102.

Christensen, Jacquelyn Youd. “ʻWeigh in the Balance:’ Anna Trapnel, John Bunyan, and Canonization.” M.A. thesis, Brigham Young University, 2003.

Christian Biography: Containing the Lives of John Bunyan and Rev. George Herbert. Choteau, MT: Old Paths Gospel Press, reprint 1998.

Chu, Wing-Mui. “A Comparison of Two Pilgrimages to Paradise: John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress and Wu Cheng’en’s Pilgrimage to the West.” Honors thesis, Eckerd College, 1994.

Cirket, Alan F. “The Bunyan Museum, Library, and Free Church, Bedford.” Bunyan Studies 4 (Spring 1991): 70–84.

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Coleman, Julie. “The Manufactured Homespun Style of John Bunyan’s Prose.” Bunyan Studies 18 (2014): 107–137.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “La destinée iconographique de The Pilgrim’s Progress de John Bunyan du XVIIe siècle au début du XIXe siècle: Répétitions, variations en chaîne et mutations.” Bulletin de la Société d’Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles 53 (November 2001): 201–232.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “The Role of Illustrations in the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 81–97. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “L’Ur-texte et son double? De l’autre côté du miroir des illustrations, avec The Pilgrim’s Progress de John Bunyan.” In Left Out: Texts and Ur-Texts, “Regards croisés sur le monde anglophone” collection, n° 4. Ed. Nathalie Collé-Bak, Monica Latham, et David Ten Eyck, 193–217. Nancy: Presses Universitaires de Nancy, 2009.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “Spreading the Written Word through Images: The Circulation of The Pilgrim’s Progress via its Illustrations.” Revue de la Société d’Études Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, Special Issue (2010): 223–246.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “Bunyan’s Pilgrims on Canvas, on Stage, in the Cellar, and in the Art Gallery: The History, Loss and Renaissance of the Moving Panorama of Pilgrim’s Progress.Bunyan Studies 15 (2011): 112–128.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “The Pilgrim’s Progresses of Bunyan’s Publishers and Illustrators, or the Role of Illustrations in the Life of a Text/Book.” In Book Practices and Textual Itineraries, vol. 1: Tracing the Contours of Literary Works. Ed. Nathalie Collé-Bak, Monica Latham, and David Ten Eyck, 157–182. Nancy: Presses Universitaires de Nancy, 2011.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “Spiritual Transfers: William Blake’s Iconographic Treatment of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 32–51. Repr. with slight modifications in British Literature and Spirituality: Theoretical Approaches and Transdisciplinary Readings. Ed. Franz Karl Wöhner and John S. Bak, 145–170. Zürich/Berlin: Lit Verlag, 2013.

Collé-Bak, Nathalie. “The Pilgrim’s Progress, Print Culture and the Dissenting Tradition.” In British Literature and Print Culture (Essays and Studies 66). Ed. Sandro Jung, 33–57. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2013.

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Collection of Illustrative Materials from the Collmer/John Bunyan Collection. Lawrence: University of Kansas, 2007.

Collmer, Robert G, ed. Bunyan in our Time. Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 1989.

Collmer, Robert G. “Mistress Diffidence: Her Arrival in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Performance for a Lifetime: A Festschrift Honoring Dorothy Howell Brown: Essays on Women, Religion, and the Renaissance. Ed. Barbara C. Ewell and Mary A. McCay, 195–204. New Orleans: Loyola University Press, 1997.

Collmer, Robert G. Bibliography of Collection for John Bunyan. Alberta: University of Alberta, 2003.

Collmer, Robert G. Review of Travel with John Bunyan: Exploring the World of John Bunyan, Author of The Pilgrim’s Progress, by John Pestell. The Recorder 9 (2003): 13.

Collmer, Robert G. Review of The Key in the Window: Marginal Notes in Bunyan’s Narratives, by Maxine Hancock. Literature and Theology 17:2 (June 2003): 213–214.

Collmer, Robert G. “Roman Catholic Versions of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Special Feature,” in 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 13. Ed. Ken Simpson, 226–243. New York: AMS Press, 2006.

Collmer, Robert G. “John Bunyan.” In The Oxford Handbook of English Literature and Theology. Ed. Andrew Haas, David Jasper, and Elisabeth Jay, 575–589. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.

Collmer, Robert G. “On the Trail of the Pilgrim: Adventures in Collecting John Bunyan.” The Recorder 13 (2007): 4–5.

Collmer, Robert G. Review of The Pilgrim’s Progress and Other Select Works, by John Bunyan. The Recorder 13 (2007): 13.

Collmer, Robert G. “Using John Bunyan in the 1850s for ‘Holy War’ in the Crimea and China.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 376–383.

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Conti, Brooke. Confessions of Faith in Early Modern England. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014.

Cook, Faith. Seeing the Invisible: Ordinary People of Extraordinary Faith. Darlington, England: Evangelical Press, 1998.

Cook, Faith. Fearless Pilgrim: The Life and Times of John Bunyan. Darlington: Evangelical Press, 2008.

Cook, Susan Deborah. “The Pilgrim’s Progress: Its Influence on and Relationship to Religious Fiction 1678–1710.” Ph.D. diss. Birkbeck, University of London, 1997.

Cook, Susan. “Pilgrim’s Progresses: Derivative Texts and the Seventeenth-Century Reader.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 186–201. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Cope, Jackson I. “The Progresses of Bunyan and Symon Patrick.” English Literary History 55:3 (Fall 1988): 599–614.

Cope, Kevin Lee. “The Propositions of Faith: The Ideology of the Royal Society and Bunyan’s Academy of Maxims.” Publications of the Mississippi Philological Association (1988): 28–38.

Cope, Kevin Lee. In and After the Beginning: Inaugural Moments and Literary Institutions in the Long Eighteenth Century. New York: AMS Press, 2007.

Copson, Stephen. Review of John Bunyan in Context, by Michael A. Mullett. Baptist Quarterly 37:1 (January 1997): 49–50.

Corns, Thomas N. “Bunyan’s Grace Abounding and the Dynamics of Restoration Nonconformity.” In English Renaissance Prose: History, Language and Politics. Ed. Neil Rhodes, 259–60. Tempe: Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 1997.

Corns, Thomas N. “Bunyan, Milton and the Diversity of Radical Protestant Writing.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 21–38. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

Corns, Thomas N. “‘On Thursday Giant Despair Beats His Prisoners’: Teaching Bunyan in an Unsympathetic Age.” In Teaching Early Modern English Prose. Eds. Margaret W. Ferguson and Susannah Brietz Monta, 292–299. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2010.

Corns, Thomas N. “‘I Have Writ, I Have Acted, I Have Peace’: The Personal and the Political in the Writing of Winstanley and Some Contemporaries.” Prose Studies 36:1 (2014): 43–51.

Corns, Thomas N. “Christopher Hill on Milton, Bunyan, and Winstanley.” Prose Studies 36:3 (2014): 209–218.

Cosby, Brian H. John Bunyan: Journey of a Pilgrim. Fearn, Scotland: Christian Focus, 2009. [Biography for children.]

Cosner, Charles Kinian, Jr. “‘Neither Lye nor Romance’: Narrativity in the Old Bailey Sessions Papers.” Ph.D. diss. Vanderbilt University, 2007.

Cotter, Holland. “A Pilgrim’s Perils in an Ancestor of B-Movies.” The New York Times (4 April 1999): 37.

Couderc, Gilles. “« Une splendide anomalie ? », le Pilgrim’s Progress de Ralph Vaughan Williams.” [“‘A Magnificent Anomaly?’, Ralph Vaughan Williams’s Pilgrim’s Progress.”] Revue LISA/LISA e-journal 12:6 (2014). Electronic publication, accessible online at <http://lisa.revues.org/6428>.

Crawford, Jason Monroe. “Personification and its Discontents: Studies from Langland to Bunyan.” Ph.D. diss., Harvard University, 2008.

Crawford, Jason. “Bunyan’s Secular Allegory.” Religion and Literature 44:1 (Spring 2012): 45–72.

Crisp, Peter. “Allegory, Maps, and Modernity: Cognitive Change from Bunyan to Forster.” Mosaic 36:4 (December 2003): 49–65.

Crisp, Peter. “Allegory, Blending, and Possible Situations.” Metaphor and Symbol 20:2 (2005): 115–31.

Crisp, Peter. “The Pilgrim’s Progress: Allegory or Novel?” Language and Literature: Journal of the Poetics and Linguistics Association 21:4 (2012): 328–344.

Cummings, Brian. “Going Wrong.” Review of The Life and Death of Mr. Badman by John Bunyan, with foreword by James Fenton, Times Literary Supplement 5504 (26 September 2008): 30.

Cummings, Brian. “Autobiography and the History of Reading.” In Cultural Reformations: Medieval and Renaissance in Literary History. Ed. Brian Cummings and James Simpson, 635–657. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010.

Cummings, Brian. “Protestant Allegory.” In The Cambridge Companion to Allegory. Ed. Rita Copeland and Peter T. Struck, 177–190. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Cunningham, Valentine. “Glossing and Glozing: Bunyan and Allegory.” In John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus: Tercentenary Essays. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 217–240. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

Cunningham, Valentine. “On the Left: Review of A Turbulent, Seditious, and Factious People: John Bunyan and his Church 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill.” Bunyan Studies 2:1 (Spring 1990): 67–73.

Cunningham, Valentine. “Mark Rutherford and the Plight of the Dissenting Aesthete.” Bunyan Studies 17 (2013): 20–31.

Cunningham, Valentine. “Getting There, Getting Where? Bunyan’s Hazardous Pilgrim Way.” The Glass 26 (Spring 2014): 3–17.

Curtin, Kathleen Robin. “Honey from the Lion: Interpretation and Religious Persecution in Early Modern English Autobiography.” Ph.D. diss., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 2013.

Curtin, Kathleen. “Identification and Difference in John Bunyan’s Reading of Reformation History.” Bunyan Studies 18 (2014): 42–60.

D

Daigle, Marsha. “Pilgrim’s Regress: Bunyan or Dante?” In Mittelalter-Rezeption, no. 5, ed. Ulrich Müller and Kathleen Verduin, 165–171. Göppingen, Germany: Kümmerle, 1996.

Daley, Jamie Temple. “Modern Versions of The Pilgrim’s Progress: West’s Miss Lonelyhearts, O’Connor’s Wise Blood and Percy’s The Moviegoer.” Ph.D. diss., University of Notre Dame, 1983, reprint 1990.

Danielson, Dennis. Review of Works of John Bunyan, ed. George Offor. Calvin Theological Journal 28 (April 1993): 186–188.

Danielson, Dennis. “Catechism, The Pilgrim’s Progress, and the pilgrim’s progress.” Journal of English and Germanic Philology 94:1 (January 1995): 42–58.

Danielson, Dennis. “Milton, Bunyan, and the Clothing of Truth and Righteousness.” In Heirs of Fame: Milton and Writers of the English Renaissance. Ed. Margo Swiss and David A. Kent, 247–269. London: Bucknell University Press, 1995.

Davies, Gaius. Genius and Grace: Sketches from a Psychiatrist’s Notebook. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1992. Chapter 2, “Grace Abounding: John Bunyan (1628–1688),” 50–85. Rev. ed. Genius, Grief and Grace: A Doctor Looks at Suffering and Success. Fearn, Ross-shire: Christian Focus, 2001. Chapter 2, “Grace Abounding: John Bunyan (1628–1688),” 53–90.

Davies, Michael. “‘The Holy War: Ideology, Culture and Dissent in Bunyan’s England.’ Review of the Second International John Bunyan Society Triennial Conference, University of Stirling, Scotland: August 31–September 4, 1998.” Bunyan Studies 8 (1998): 82–86.

Davies, Michael. “Bunyan’s Exceeding Maze: Grace Abounding and the Labyrinth of Predestination.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 81–96. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Davies, Michael. Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.

Davies, Michael. “‘Stout & Valiant Champions for God’: The Radical Reformation of Romance in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 103–132. Bern; Oxford: Peter Lang, 2002.

Davies, Michael. Review of John Bunyan and the Language of Conviction, by Beth Lynch. The Recorder 12 (2006): 13–14.

Davies, Michael. “Shaping Grace: The Spiritual Autobiographies of John Bunyan, John Newton, and William Cowper.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 36–69.

Davies, Michael. “‘John Bunyan: Texts, Contexts, Reception’ – The International John Bunyan Society Fourth Triennial Conference, The Open University and De Montfort University, Bedford, 1–5 September 2004.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 118–121.

Davies, Michael. “The Relevant Pilgrim: John Bunyan in A Matter of Life and Death.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 185–212. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

Davies, Michael. “Bunyan’s Bawdy: Sex and Sexual Wordplay in the Writings of John Bunyan.” In Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan. Ed. Vera J. Camden, 100–119. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.

Davies, Michael. “Spirit in the Letters: John Bunyan’s Congregational Epistles.” The Seventeenth Century 24:2 (Autumn 2009): 323–360.

Davies, Michael. “Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners: John Bunyan and Spiritual Autobiography.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 67–79. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Davies, Michael. “The Wilderness of the Word: John Bunyan and the Book in Christian’s Hand.” Bunyan Studies 15 (2011): 26–52.

Davies, Michael. “Bunyan, John.” In The Encyclopedia of English Renaissance Literature. Ed. Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr. and Alan Stewart, 129–133. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.

Davies, Michael. “The Silencing of God’s Dear Ministers: John Bunyan and his Church in 1662.” In “Settling the Peace of the Church”: 1662 Revisited. Ed. N.H. Keeble, 85–113. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.

Davies, Michael. “When was Bunyan Elected Pastor? Fixing a Date in the Bedford Church Book.” Bunyan Studies 18 (2014): 7–41.

Davis, J. C. Review of John Bunyan in Context, by Michael A. Mullett. History, 83:270 (April 1998): 337–338.

Davis, Nick. “Bunyan with Mandeville: Allegory, Originality and the Superseding of Collective Experience in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 9–33.

Davis, Nick. “Mirroring, Anatomy, Transparency: The Collective Body and the Co-opted Individual in Spenser, Hobbes and Bunyan.” In Anatomy and the Organization of Knowledge, 1500–1850. Ed. Matthew Landers and Brian Muñoz, 85–97. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012.

Davis, Nick. Early Modern Writing and the Privatization of Experience. London: Bloomsbury, 2013. Especially Chapter 5: “Hobbes and Bunyan: The Subsuming Individual Vision,” 113–134.

Davis, Paul. “John Bunyan and Heavenly Conversation.” Essays in Criticism 50:3 (July 2000): 215–41.

Davis, William L. “‘Hiding in Plain Sight: The Origins of the Book of Mormon.” Los Angeles Review of Books. October 30, 2012. [Argues that The Pilgrim’s Progress is a key source for the Book of Mormon.]

Deal, William S. A Pilgrim Who Made Progress. Westchester, IL: Good News Publishers, reprint 1994.

Deckard, Mark A. Helpful Truth in Past Places: The Puritan Practice of Biblical Counselling. Ross-shire: Christian Focus, 2010.

DeKrey, Gary. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves. H-Net Reviews in the Humanities & Social Sciences (April 2004): 1–4.

de Lange, Frits. “Life as a Pilgrimage. John Bunyan and the Modern Life Course.” In Passion of Protestants. Ed. P. N. Holtrop, Frederik de Lange, and Riemer Roukema, 95–126. Kampen: Kok, 2004.

de Lange, Frits. “Becoming One Self: A Critical Retrieval of ‘Choice Biography.’” Journal of Reformed Theology 1:3 (2007): 272–293.

Delbridge, John R. “John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress: Allegory as a Weapon in a War of Words.” M.A. thesis, Western Washington University, 1994.

De Marco, Nick. “Structural ‘Pliability’ and Narratological ‘Diffidence’ in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 8 (1998): 36–53.

Demers, Patricia. “‘I could with my tongue were as the pen of a ready writer:’ The Fragility of Hope in Elizabeth Major’s Honey on the Rod.” Bunyan Studies 7 (1997): 38–48.

Demers, Patricia. “Bunyan’s Sisters: ‘Unfolding of [their] Secret Things.’” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 141–152. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Derry, Stephen. “An Allusion to Bunyan in Mansfield Park.” Notes & Queries 40:4 (December 1993): 466–467.

Derry, Stephen. “Mansfield Park, Sterne’s Starling, and Bunyan’s Man of Despair.” Notes & Queries 44:3 (September 1997): 322–323.

Detweiler, Robert, David Jasper, et al. Religion and Literature: A Reader. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2000.

Dever, Mark E. “The Spiritual Church: ‘Let Us Not Divide’ – John Bunyan and Baptism.” Bibliotheca Sacra 172:686 (April–June 2015): 131–138.

de Vries, Pieter. John Bunyan on the Order of Salvation. Trans. C. van Haaften. New York: Peter Lang, 1994.

de Vries, Pieter. “John Bunyan and His Relevance for Today.” Puritan Reformed Journal 2:1 (January 2010): 67–74.

DeWalt, Michael M. “The Doctrine of Adoption: Theological Trajectories in Puritan Literature.” Puritan Reformed Journal 7:2 (July 2015): 127–146.

Diamond, David Mark. “Full Faith and Credit: Reading Character after Calvin.” Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, 2015.

Diamond, David M. “Sinners and ‘Standers By:’ Reading the Characters of Calvinism in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Eighteenth-Century Studies 49:1 (Fall 2015): 1–15.

Di Gangi, Mariano. A Golden Treasury of Puritan Devotion: Selections from the Writings of Thirteen Puritan Divines. Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing, 1999.

Dilbeck, D. H. “The Christian Pilgrimage of a Liberal Arts Education: John Bunyan’s Lessons for Learning in Exile and Learning for Freedom.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 352–369.

Dillstone, F.W. “The Bunyan Tercentenary.” Theology Today 45:2 (July 1988): 159–165.

DiMassa, Michael V. “‘On to the City of God:’ The Influence of The Pilgrim’s Progress on ‘Rugby Chapel.’” English Language Notes 35:2 (December 1997): 44–61.

Dimmock, Matthew. Mythologies of the Prophet Muhammad in Early Modern English Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Especially Chapter 4, “Bunyan’s Dilemma: Seventeenth-Century Imposture, Liberty and True Mahomets,” 149–199.

Dixon, David N. “The Second Text: Missionary Publishing and Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” International Bulletin of Missionary Research 36:2 (April 2012): 86–90.

Dogoode, Deborah Davis. “Literature and Religion: The Artist in Search of Meaning for the Whole Man.” Mount Olive Review 5 (Spring 1991): 29–37.

Dowd, Michelle M. Review of Protestant Autobiography in the Seventeenth-Century Anglophone World, by Kathleen Lynch. Journal of British Studies 52:3 (July 2013): 763–765.

Dowden, Edward. Puritan and Anglican Studies in Literature. Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing, reprint 2007.

Dowley, Tim. Pilgrim’s Progress: A Retelling of John Bunyan’s Classic. Oxford: Candle Books, 2004.

Dowling, Elizabeth M., and George W. Encyclopedia of Religious and Spiritual Development. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2006.

Drummond, C. Q. “Believing and Coming in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In In Defence of Adam: Essays on Bunyan, Milton and Others. Ed. John Baxter and Gordon Harvey, 3–62. Herefordshire: Edgeways, 2004.

Drury, John. “The Wicked Warned Away.” Review of Clarendon Miscellaneous Works by John Bunyan, vols. 3, 5, and 10, and The Life and Death of Mr. Badman by John Bunyan, ed. James F. Forrest and Roger Sharrock. Times Literary Supplement 4466 (4 November 1988): 1233.

Dunan, Anne. “‘Images along the Way’: emblèmes et représentations du divin dans le Pilgrim’s Progress de John Bunyan.” Interfaces: Image, Texte, Langage 16 (1999): 5–28.

Dunan, Anne. “The Life and Death of Mr. Badman as a ‘Compassionate Counsel to All Young Men’: John Bunyan and Nonconformist Writings on Youth.” Bunyan Studies 9 (1999/2000): 50–68.

Dunan, Anne. “‘Les lieux de mémoire’: lectures et topographie dans la seconde partie du Pilgrim’s Progress de John Bunyan.” In Cartes, paysages, territoires. Ed. Ronald Shusterman, 167–178. Bordeaux: Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 2000.

Dunan, Anne. “Le châtiment de Dorothy Mately: mise en livre des histories de jugement.” Bulletin de la Societé d’Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles 50 (June 2000): 31–50.

Dunan, Anne. “The Pilgrim’s Progress de Bunyan ou le voyage spiritual du bon usage de la meditation.” In Lignes de fuite: Littérature de voyage du monde Anglophone. Ed. Jean Viviès, 29–46. Aix-en-Provence: Publications de l’Université de Provence, 2003.

Dunan, Anne. “‘Parables run not always upon all fours’: allégories, emblèmes et défense du style métaphorique chez Richard Bernard, John Bunyan et Benjamin Keach.” Bulletin de la Societé d’Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles 58 (June 2004): 131–145.

Dunan, Anne. “Mélancolie, enthousiasme et folie: pathologie et inspiration dans la literature dissidente.” Etudes Epistèmé: Science(s) et Littérature(s) 7 (Spring 2005): 65–93.

Dunan-Page, Anne. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves, and Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. Cahiers Elisabéthains 66 (Autumn 2004): 86–87.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “Mélancolie, enthousiasme et folie: pathologie et inspiration dans la literature dissidente.” Etudes Epistèmé: Science(s) et Littérature(s) 7 (Spring 2005): 65–93.

Dunan-Page, Anne. Grace Overwhelming: John Bunyan, The Pilgrim’s Progress and the Extremes of the Baptist Mind. Bern: Peter Lang, 2006.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “John Bunyan’s A Confession of My Faith and Restoration Anabaptism.” Prose Studies: History, Theory, Criticism 28:1 (April 2006): 19–40.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “Les représentations du divin et de la guerre dans The Holy War de John Bunyan.” In Les Discours Religieux et la Guerre dans le Monde Britannique. Ed. Gilles Teulié, 125–144. Montpellier: Presses Universitaires de Montpellier, 2006.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “‘The Portraiture of John Bunyan’ Revisited: Robert White and Images of the Author.” Bunyan Studies 13 (2008/2009): 7–39.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “Note on The Cambridge Companion to John Bunyan.” The Recorder 15 (Spring 2009): 7.

Dunan-Page, Anne, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “Introduction.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 1–12. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “Posthumous Bunyan: Early Lives and the Development of the Canon.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 137–149. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “Charles Doe and the Publication of John Bunyan’s Folio (1692).” Notes & Queries 57:4 (December 2010): 508–511.

Dunan-Page, Anne. “The Baptist Churches and their Books.” The Recorder 20 (Spring 2014): 26–28.

Durso, Keith E., ed. No Armor for the Back: Baptist Prison Writings, 1600s–1700s. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 2007.

Durston, Chris. “Paperback History.” History Today 41:3 (March 1991): 59.

Dusinberre, Juliette. “Bunyan and Virginia Woolf: A History and a Language of Their Own.” Bunyan Studies 5 (Autumn 1994): 15–47.

Dyrness, William A. “Dante, Bunyan and the Case for a Protestant Aesthetics.” International Journal of Systematic Theology 10 (July 2008): 285–302.

Dyrness, William A. Poetic Theology: God and the Poetics of Everyday Life. Grand Rapids, Mich.: W. B. Eerdmans, 2011. Especially Chapter 6: “Dante, Bunyan, and the Search for a Protestant Aesthetics,” 153–86.

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 Edward, Lawrence K. Pilgrim’s Progress: A Modern Adaptation of the Book by John Bunyan. Houston: Valid Angel Comics, 1990.

Edwards, Andrew, and Fleur Thornton. John Bunyan: The Story of How a Hooligan and Soldier Became a Preacher, Prisoner and Famous Writer. Leominster: Day One, 2005.

Edwards, David. Twenty Things You Should Read. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2006.

Edwards, Philip. Pilgrimage and Literary Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Especially Chapter 9, “Doubting Castle,” 187–204.

Eggett, D. J. Review of The Hidden Smile of God: The Fruit of Affliction in the Lives of John Bunyan, William Cowper, and David Brainerd, by John Piper. Christian Library Journal 7 (Winter 2002): 69.

Ellis, James J. John Bunyan: The Bedford Tinker Who Became the Immortal Dreamer. Salem, OH: Schmul Publication Company, reprint 1990.

Ellison, Katherine E. “After the Fatal News Arrived: Information Delivery and the Eighteenth-Century Media State.” Ph.D. diss., Emory University, 2004.

Elwood, Roger. Great Sermons, Volume 1. Uhrichsville, OH: Barbour Publications, 1998.

Engehausen, Frank. “John Bunyan’s The Life and Death of Mr. Badman und die Geschichte vom Tod der Dorothy Mately.” Anglia 112:1–2 (1994): 123–129.

Engetsu, Katsuhiro. “Trembling at the Word of God: Bunyan’s Hostility to Friends.” Nagoya Gakuin University Journal of Foreign Studies 6:2 (1995): 79–94.

Engetsu, Katsuhiro. “The Parable of Dives and Lazarus and Bunyan: The Richness of the Beggar in A Few Sighs from Hell.” Doshisha Studies in English 68 (1997): 1–19.

Engetsu, Katsuhiro, Review of Grace Abounding, with other Spiritual Autobiographies by John Bunyan et al., ed. John Stachniewski and Anita Pacheco. Bunyan Studies 9 (1999–2000): 88–90.

Engetsu, Katsuhiro. “Bunyan and Schooling Journeys: The Second Part of The Pilgrim’s Progress as a Discourse on Puritan Education.” Annals of the Japanese Association for the Study of Puritanism 2 (2007): 2–11.

Engetsu, Katsuhiro. Review of The Holy War: Annotated Companion to The Pilgrim’s Progress, by John Bunyan, ed. Daniel V. Runyon. Bunyan Studies 18 (2014): 155–158.

Erickson, Kathleen Powers. “Pilgrims and Strangers: The Role of The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Imitation of Christ in Shaping the Piety of Vincent van Gogh.” Bunyan Studies 4 (Spring 1991): 7–36.

Eriksen, Niels Nymann. “John Bunyan’s Conversion.” MA thesis, Westminster College, Cambridge (England), 1993.

Eriksen, Niels Nymann. “John Bunyans omvendelse: En læsning af Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners.” Dansk teologisk tidsskrift 58:2 (1995): 108–128.

Evans, Vivienne. John Bunyan: His Life and Times. Dunstable: Book Castle, 1988.

Ewell, Barbara C., and Mary A. McCay, eds. Performance for a Lifetime: A Festschrift Honoring Dorothy Harrell Brown: Essays on Women, Religion, and the Renaissance. New Orleans: Loyola University, 1997.

Ezell, Margaret J. M. “Looking Glass Histories.” Journal of British Studies 43:3 (Jul 2004): 317–338.

Ezell, Margaret J. M. “Bunyan’s Women, Women’s Bunyan.” In Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan. Ed. Vera J. Camden, 63–80. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.

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Fannin, Jordan Rowan. “The Promise and Temptation of Allegory: Reading the Possibility of Pilgrimage in (Baptist) Bunyan and (Catholic) O’Connor.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 267–289.

Farina, John. Review of Archetypes of Conversion: The Autobiographies of Augustine, Bunyan, and Merton, by Anne Hunsaker Hawkins. Catholic Historical Review 74:2 (April 1988): 296–297.

Fells, A. Geetha Shanthini. “Towards the Quest for Salvation and Spirituality: A Thematological Re-reading of John Bunyan’s Spiritual Trilogy.” Ph.D. diss., Manonmaniam Sundaranar University, 2011.

Ferguson, Margaret W., and Susannah Brietz Monta, eds. Teaching Early Modern English Prose. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2010.

Ferrell, Tom. Review of John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress: A Retelling, by Gary D. Schmidt. New York Times Book Review 99 (13 November 1994): 030.

Fiddes, Paul S. “Internal and External Powers: A Response to ‘Journeying in Hope’ by Scott C. Ryan.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 319–325.

Finley, Stephen C. “Bunyan among the Victorians: Macaulay, Froude, Ruskin.” Journal of Literature and Theology 3:1 (March 1989): 77–94.

Fish, Stanley E. Self-Consuming Artifacts: The Experience of Seventeenth-Century Literature. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, reprint 1994.

Fleurdorge, Claude. “Intertextualité et herméneutique dans The Pilgrim’s Progress.” QWERTY: Arts, Litteratures & Civilisations du Monde Anglophone 2 (October 1992): 17–34.

Ford, Cheryl V. The Pilgrim’s Progress Devotional: A Daily Journey through the Christian Life. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1998.

Ford, Sallie Rochester. Mary Bunyan: A Tale of Religious Persecution and Heroic Faith. Birmingham, AL: Solid Ground Christian Books, 2007. [Reprint of Mary Bunyan, The Dreamer’s Blind Daughter: A Tale of Religious Persecution, published 1860.]

Forrest, James F. “Conspectus: The Critical Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress, Second Part.” Bunyan Studies 1:1 (Autumn 1988): 37–42.

Forrest, James F. “Allegory as Sacred Sport: Manipulation of the Reader in Spenser and Bunyan.” In Bunyan in Our Time. Ed. Robert G. Collmer, 93–112. Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 1989.

Forrest, James F. “Between Presumption and Timidity: on Editing Bunyan.” In Bunyan in England and Abroad. Ed. M. van Os and G. J. Schutte, 61–72. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1990.

Franson, J. Karl. “From Vanity Fair to Emerald City: Baum’s Debt to Bunyan.” Children’s Literature: Annual of the Modern Language Association Division on Children’s Literature and the Children’s Literature Association 23 (1995): 95–114.

Fredericks, Anthony D. Involving Parents Through Children’s Literature, Grades 3–4. Englewood, CO: Teacher Ideas Press, 1993.

Freeman, Thomas S. “A Library in Three Volumes: Foxe’s ‘Book of Martyrs’ in the Writings of John Bunyan.” Bunyan Studies 5 (Autumn 1994): 47–57.

Fretz, Clarence Y., and Ruth Thompson. Student’s Workbook on The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan. Harrisonburg, VA: Christian Light Publications, 1990.

Friedman, Ruth E. “‘Here comes newer comfort’: The Transformation of Comfort from Foxe to Bunyan.” Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, 2008.

Froude, James Anthony. Bunyan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, reprint 2011. [Originally published 1880.]

Fry, Christopher. A Ringing of Bells: A Conversational Fantasy. London: Samuel French, 2000.

Fuchs, Anne. Review of The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Isabel Hofmeyr. Research in African Literatures 36:1 (Spring 2005): 126–127.

Furbank, P. N. “Parnassus and Conventicle Reconciled: Review of John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus: Tercentenary Essays, ed. N. H. Keeble.” Bunyan Studies 1:1 (Autumn 1998): 71–74.

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Gabrieli, Vittorio. “Falstaff and Mr. Badman: Libertine and Puritan.” Notes & Queries 35:2 (June 1988): 165–167.

Gabrieli, Vittorio. “Two Shakespearian Notes.” [Identifies possible allusions suggesting that Bunyan read Shakespeare.] Memoria di Shakespeare 4 (2003): 23–27.

Galbraith, Jeffrey. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera Camden. Religion in the Age of Enlightenment 2 (2010): 369–373.

Garrett, Christopher E. Review of John Bunyan and the Language of Conviction, by Beth Lynch. Seventeenth Century News 64:1/2 (Spring/Summer 2006): 34–37.

Garrett, Christopher E. “Imitative Sequel Writing: Divine Breathings, Second Part of The Pilgrim’s Progress, and the Case of T. S. (aka Thomas Sherman).” Ph.D. diss., Texas A&M University, 2007.

Garrett, Christopher E. “George Offor and the Case of T. S.” The Recorder 14 (2008): 18–19.

Garrett, Christopher E. Review of The Pilgrim’s Progress, ed. Roger Pooley. The Recorder 15 (Spring 2009): 4.

Garrett, Christopher E. “George Offor and the Case of T. S.” In Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from the Recorder, 1999–2008. Ed. Ken Simpson, 47–51. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

Garrett, Christopher E. “The Pilgrim’s Active Progress,” Explorations in Renaissance Culture 36.2 (Winter 2010): 214–228.

Garrett, Christopher E. Review of The Holy War: Annotated Companion to The Pilgrim’s Progress, ed. Daniel V. Runyon. The Recorder 19 (Spring 2013): 9–11.

Garrett, Christopher E. “How T. S. Became Known as Thomas Sherman: An Attribution Narrative.” Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 108:2 (June 2014): 191–216.

Garrett, Graeme. Review of With Rhyme and Reason: The Collected Poems, Songs and Prayers of John Bunyan, by John Bunyan. St. Mark’s Review 155 (Spring 1993): 48.

Gay, David. “James F. Forrest: The Preceptor as Scholar and Teacher.” Bunyan Studies 5 (Autumn 1994): 6–12.

Gay, David. “Reformation, Revolution, Restoration: The Texts and Contexts of Bunyan’s England.” Review of the Third International John Bunyan Society Triennial Conference, Kent State University, OH: 10–14 October 2001. Bunyan Studies 10 (2001/2002): 88–90.

Gay, David. “The Nameless Instrument: Bunyan’s Representation of Prayer in The Holy War.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 88–104.

Gay, David. Review of “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Special Feature,” in 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era, ed. Ken Simpson. The Recorder 13 (2007): 12–13.

Gay, David. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera J. Camden. The Recorder 15 (Spring 2009): 5–6.

Gay, David. “‘Differing Spirits’: Jeremy Taylor on Prayer and Poetry.” Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 89–102.

Gay, David. “The Seventh Triennial Conference of the IJBS, Princeton University, 12–16 August 2013: ‘John Bunyan: Conscience, History and Justice’, Report 1.” The Recorder 20 (Spring 2014): 9.

Gay, David. “The Name of the Prayer in The Holy War.” Bunyan Studies 19 (2015): 98–117.

Gay, David, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, eds. Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Gearhart, Stephannie Suzanne. “ʻCome Let us Look in the Mirror Together’: Doubling and Autobiography in John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding and Orhan Pamuk’s The White Castle.” MA thesis, Lehigh University, 2000.

Geisenhanslüke, Achim. Der Buchstabe des Geistes: Postfigurationen der Allegorie von Bunyan zu Nietzsche. München: W. Fink, 2003.

George, Timothy. “Controversy and Communion: The Limits of Baptist Fellowship from Bunyan to Spurgeon.” In The Gospel in the World: International Baptist Studies. Ed. David W. Bebbington, 38–58. Carlisle: Paternoster, 2002.

George, Timothy, and David S. Dockery, eds. Baptist Theologians. Nashville: Broadman Press, 1990.

Gillespie, Katherine. “Anna Trapnel’s Window on the Word: The Domestic Sphere of Public Dissent in Seventeenth-Century Nonconformity.” Bunyan Studies 7 (1997): 49–72.

Gillespie, Katherine. “Mary Rowlandson’s ‘Restauration’ and the English Restoration.” Bunyan Studies 11 (2003/2004): 46–73.

Gillis, Casey. “Filming ‘Pilgrim’s Progress.’” The [Lynchburg, Virginia] News & Advance (5 June 2008).

Goldie, Mark. Review of John Bunyan and his England, 1628–1688, ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim. History 77:249 (February 1992): 120–121.

Goldman, Peter. “The Sign of the Cross in John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding.” Anthropoetics: The Journal of Generative Anthropology 3:2 (Fall 1997–Winter 1998). Accessible online at <http://www.anthropoetics.ucla.edu/ap0302/BUNYAN_W.htm>.

Goldman, Peter. “Living Words: Iconoclasm and Beyond in John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding.” New Literary History 33:3 (Summer 2002): 461–489.

Gonzalez, Daniel. “The Culture of Crime: Representations of the Criminal in Eighteenth-Century England.” Ph.D. diss. Louisana State University, 2002.

Graham, Elspeth. “Authority, Resistance and Loss: Gendered Difference in the Writings of John Bunyan and Hannah Allen.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 115–131. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Graham, Elspeth. “‘Lewd, Profane Swaggers’ and Charismatic Preachers: John Bunyan and George Fox.” In Sacred and Profane: Secular and Devotional Interplay in Early Modern British Literature. Ed. Helen Wilcox, Richard Todd, and Alasdair MacDonald, 307–318. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1996.

Graham, Jean. “‘Tell All Men’: Bunyan and the Gendering of Discourse.” Bunyan Studies 11 (2003/2004): 8–22.

The Grand Moving Panorama of Pilgrim’s Progress. Montclair, NJ: Montclair Art Museum, 1999.

Gray, Jean, and Linda Mance. A Children’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Leominster: Gracewing, 1990.

Gray, Linda. “John Bunyan.” Encyclopedia of Christian Literature, Vol. 2. Ed. George T. Kurian, 231–232. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 2008.

“Great Dissenter, A.” Review of Bunyan the Christian by Gordon Wakefield. Expository Times 103:11 (August 1992): 352.

Greaves, Richard L. “Conscience, Liberty, and the Spirit: Bunyan and Nonconformity.” In John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 21–44. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

Greaves, Richard L. “John Bunyan and the Changing Face of Popery, 1665–1684.” Bunyan Studies 1:1 (Autumn 1988): 15–25.

Greaves, Richard L. “John Bunyan: Tercentenary Reflections.” American Baptist Quarterly 7:4 (December 1988): 496–508.

Greaves, Richard L. “The Spirit and the Sword: Bunyan and the Stuart State.” In Bunyan in Our Time. Ed. Robert G. Collmer, 138–160. Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 1989.

Greaves, Richard L. Enemies Under His Feet: Radicals and Nonconformists in Britain, 1664–1667. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1990.

Greaves, Richard L. “Amid the Holy War: Bunyan and the Ethic of Suffering.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Eds. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 63–76. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Greaves, Richard L. “John Bunyan: The Present State of Historical Scholarship.” In Bunyan in England and Abroad. Ed. M. van Os and G. J. Schutte, 29–44. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1990.

Greaves, Richard L. “To Be Found Faithful.” Bunyan Studies 4 (Spring 1991): 37–65.

Greaves, Richard L. John Bunyan and English Nonconformity. London: Hambledon Press, 1992.

Greaves, Richard L. “Let Truth Be Free: John Bunyan and the Restoration Crisis of 1667–73.” Albion 28 (1996): 587–605.

Greaves, Richard L. Review of John Bunyan in Context, by Michael A. Mullet. Church History 66:3 (September 1997): 602–603.

Greaves, Richard L. “Bunyan, the Shadow of Persecution, and the Power of Awakening Words.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 9–22. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Greaves, Richard L. “Bunyan and the Holy War.” In The Cambridge Companion to Writing of the English Revolution. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 268–285. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.

Greaves, Richard L. Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2002.

Greaves, Richard L. “Bunyan’s Doctrine of Predestination: A Historical Perspective.” The Recorder 6 (2000): 7–10. Reprinted in Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from the Recorder, 1999–2008. Ed. Ken Simpson, 13–21. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

Greaves, Richard L. “Bunyan, John (bap. 1628, d. 1688).” In Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison, VIII: 702–711. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Also accessible online to subscribers at <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/3949>.

Green, Bernard. “Bunyan’s Worst Temptation: A Sermon Delivered at Bunyan Meeting House, Bedford on Sunday, 4th December 1988.” Bedfordshire County Council, 1989.

Green, I. M. “Bunyan in Context: The Changing Face of Protestantism in Seventeenth-Century England.” In Bunyan in England and Abroad. Ed. M. van Os and G. J. Schutte, 1–28. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1990.

Green, Jay P. The Pilgrim’s Progress in Modern English. Lafayette, IN: Sovereign Grace Publishers, 2000.

Greenfield, Sayre N. “Bunyan, Non-Conformism, and the Limits of Allegory.” Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century 303 (1992): 439–441.

Gribben, Crawford. The Puritan Millennium: Literature and Theology, 1550–1682. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2000. Revised edition, Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2008.

Gulö, Ingatan. “John Bunyan’s Perspective on the Implementation of the Law of Moses.” Teknosastik 10:1 (2012): 22–29.

Gulö, Ingatan. “Controversial Portrayal of the Law of Moses in the Novel The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Research Journal of English Language and Literature 1:4 (2013): 249–255.

Gupta, M. G. Mystic Symbolism in Ramayan, Mahabharat, and The Pilgrim’s Progress. Agra, India: M. G. Publishers, 1993.

Gurr, Jens Martin. The Human Soul as Battleground: Variations on Dualism and the Self in English Literature. Heidelberg: Winter, 2003. Especially Chapter 5, “Bunyan, Psychomachia, and the Dissolution of Calvinism through Allegory: Grace Abounding, Pilgrim’s Progress, and The Holy War,” 105–129.

Gurr, Jens Martin. “The Taboo of Revolutionary Thought after 1660 and Strategies of Subversion in Milton’s Paradise Lost and Bunyan’s The Holy War.” In Taboo and Transgression in British Literature from the Renaissance to the Present. Ed. Stefan Horlacher, Stefan Glomb, and Lars Heiler, 99–116. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

Guy-Bray, Stephen. Against Reproduction: Where Renaissance Texts Come From. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009. Especially Chapter 3, “Beginnings,” 139–175.

H

Hagen, Seth. “Traveling the Many ‘Crooked and Wide’ Ways: Allegorical Beckoning in Eudora Welty’s Losing Battles.” Eudora Welty Review 4 (Spring 2012): 103–128.

Halkjær, Ove Magnus. “Whats negotiate?: en sammenlignende analyse av John Bunyan: The Pilgrim’s Progress (1678) og Cormac McCarthy: The Road (2006).” Master’s thesis, University of Oslo, 2011.

Hall, Barry. “‘To give myself up to a serious examination’: Forms of Dissent in Seventeenth-Century Nonconformist Spiritual Autobiographies.” Ph.D. diss., Northumbria University, 2011.

Hall, Barry. “Conflict, Closure, Dilemma: Bunyan’s Grace Abounding.” Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 103–120.

Hamilton, Gary D. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves. Church History 74:3 (September 2005): 620–621.

Hamlin, Hannibal. “Bunyan’s Biblical Progresses.” In The King James Bible after 400 Years: Literary, Linguistic, and Cultural Influences. Ed. Hannibal Hamlin and Norman W. Jones, 202–218. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Hammond, Mary. “The Pilgrim’s Progress and its Nineteenth-Century Publishers.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 99–118. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

Hammond, Paul. Review of A Turbulent, Seditious, and Factious People: John Bunyan and His Church, 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill. Review of English Studies 41:164 (November 1990): 564–566.

Hancock, Maxine. “Bunyan’s Narrative Artistry in The Pilgrim’s Progress, The Second Part.” MA thesis, University of Alberta, 1988.

Hancock, Maxine. “Bunyan as Reader: The Record of Grace Abounding.” Bunyan Studies 5 (Autumn 1994): 68–84.

Hancock, Maxine. “Folklore and Theology in the Structure and Narrative Strategies of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 9 (1999/2000): 7–24.

Hancock, Maxine. The Key in the Window: Marginal Notes in Bunyan’s Narratives. Vancouver: Regent College Publishers, 2000.

Hancock, Maxine. “Identity, Agency, and Community: Intimations and Implications of Emerging Literacy for Women in The Pilgrim’s Progress, The Second Part.” Bunyan Studies 11 (2003/2004): 74–93.

Hancock, Maxine. Review of Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. The Seventeenth Century 19:2 (Autumn 2004): 286–288.

Hancock, Maxine. Review of Prisoner of Conscience: John Bunyan on Self, Community and Christian Faith, by Galen K. Johnson. The Recorder 11 (2005): 9.

Hancock, Maxine. “Aging as a Stage of the Heroic Pilgrimage of Faith: Some Literary and Theological Lenses for ‘Re-visioning’ Age.” Crux 47:1 (Spring 2011): 2–14.

Hancock, Maxine, Ian MacLaren, and James G. Randall. John Bunyan, 1628–1688: The Books He Read, The Words He Wrote. Alberta: University of Alberta, 1995. [Exhibition catalogue.]

Hancock, Maxine, and Arlette Zinck. “Baxter, Bunyan and a Puritan Reframing of Ageing.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 56–75.

Harding, M. Esther. Journey into Self. Boston, Massachusetts: SIGO Press, reprint 1993.

Harding, William Henry. John Bunyan: Pilgrim and Dreamer. Westwood, N.J.: Barbour and Company, 1988.

Hargan, Jim. “John Bunyan’s Progress.” British Heritage 22:1 (December 2000/January 2001): 46–53.

Harinck, C. The Characters in The Pilgrim’s Progress of John Bunyan. Houten, The Netherlands: Den Hertog, 2001.

Harris, John F. “Moving the Heart: The Preaching of John Bunyan.” In Not by Might nor by Power: Papers Read at the 1988 Westminster Conference, 32–51. London: Westminster Conference, 1989.

Harris, Mark. Companions for Your Spiritual Journey: Discovering the Disciplines of the Saints. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1999.

Harrison, Frank Mott. John Bunyan: A Story of his Life. Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, reprint 1989.

Hart, Jonathan. Fictional and Historical Worlds. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. Especially Chapter 12, “Bunyan’s Apology for his Progress,” 183–190.

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Haskin, Dayton. Review of John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus: Tercentenary Essays, ed. N. H. Keeble. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 41:1 (January 1990): 170–171.

Haskin, Dayton. Review of John Bunyan’s Grace Abounding and The Pilgrim’s Progress: An Overview of Literary Studies, 1960–1987, by E. Beatrice Batson. Modern Philology 88:1 (August 1990): 84–86.

Haskin, Dayton. “Bibliography Supplementing John Bunyan: A Reference Guide, ed. James F. Forrest and Richard Lee Greaves.” The Recorder 2:2 (Winter 1995): 9–16.

Haskin, Dayton. “That Year’s Work: A Bibliography Supplementing John Bunyan: A Reference Guide. Eds. James F. Forrest and Richard L. Greaves.” The Recorder 3:1 (Spring 1995): 17–20.

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Hastings, James, and John A. Selbie. Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics, Vol. 2: Arthur – Bunyan. London: T & T Clark, reprint 2003.

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Hawkes, David. “Master of His Ways? Determinism and the Market in The Life and Death of Mr. Badman. In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 211–230. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

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Hawkins, Anne Hunsaker. Archetypes of Conversion: The Autobiographies of Augustine, Bunyan, and Merton. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press/London: Associated University Presses, 1985. Reprint, Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2014.

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Haykin, Michael A. G. The British Particular Baptists, 1638–1910. Springfield, MO: Particular Baptist Press, 1998.

Haykin, Michael A. G. “John Bunyan on Praying with the Holy Spirit.” In Taking Hold of God: Reformed and Puritan Perspectives on Prayer. Eds. Joel R. Beeke and Brian G. Najapfour, 109–119. Grand Rapids, Mich: Reformation Heritage Books, 2011.

Haykin, Michael A. G. The Reformers and Puritans as Spiritual Mentors: “Hope is Kindled. Kitchener, Ontario: Joshua Press, 2012. Esp. Chapter 11, “‘I will pray with the Spirit’: John Bunyan on Prayer and the Holy Spirit,” 163–174.

Haykin, Michael A. G., and C. Jeffrey Robinson. “Particular Baptist Debates about Communion and Hymn-singing.” In Drawn into Controversie: Reformed Theological Diversity and Debates Within Seventeenth-Century British Puritanism. Ed. Michael A. G. Haykin and Mark Jones, 284–308. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011.

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Hazelbaker, L. Edward. The Pilgrim’s Progress in Modern English. North Brunswick, NJ: Bridge-Logos Publishers, 1998.

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Hein, Rolland. Christian Mythmakers: C. S. Lewis, Madeleine L’Engle, J. R. R. Tolkien, George MacDonald, G. K. Chesterton, Charles Williams, Dante Alighieri, John Bunyan, Walter Wangerin, Robert Siegel, and Hannah Hurnard. Chicago: Cornerstone Press, 1998. Revised edition, 2008. Repr. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2014.

Henderson, Christina. “A Fairy Tale of American Progress: Frances Hodgson Burnett’s Two Little Pilgrims at the World’s Fair.” Children’s Literature 42 (2014): 108–135.

Henry, Douglas V. “Reading Pilgrim’s Progress as a Great Book: A Response to ‘The Promise and Temptation of Allegory’ by Jordan Rowan Fannin.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 290–297.

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Hexham, Irving. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves. Religious Studies and Theology 23:1 (2004): 128–130.

Heydt, Bruce. “The Tinker’s Treasure: John Bunyan and The Pilgrim’s Progress.” British Heritage 27:4 (September 2006): 46–51.

Hicks, Janet Kristine. “John Bunyan’s The Holy War, An Allegory of Puritan Belief: A Thesis in History and English.” MS thesis, State University of New York, College at Buffalo, 1990.

Hill, Christopher. A Turbulent, Seditious, and Factious People: John Bunyan and his Church, 1628–1688. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988; published as A Tinker and a Poor Man: John Bunyan and his Church, 1628–1688. New York: W. W. Norton, 1988.

Hill, Christopher. “John Bunyan and His Publics.” History Today 38:10 (October 1988): 13–19.

Hill, Christopher. “John Bunyan and the English Revolution.” American Baptist Quarterly 7:4 (December 1988): 443–459.

Hill, Christopher. “Bunyan, Professors and Sinners.” Bunyan Studies 2:1 (Spring 1990): 7–25.

Hill, Christopher. “Bunyan’s Contemporary Reputation.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 3–16. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Hill, Christopher. “Milton, Bunyan, and the Literature of Defeat.” Mosaic 24:1 (Winter 1991): 1–12.

Hill, Kimberly. “Bunyan’s Women, Women’s Bunyan: A Review of Margaret Ezell’s Plenary Address at the Bunyan Conference.” The Recorder 8 (2002): 3.

Hill, Peter. “Early Arabic Translations of English Fiction: The Pilgrim’s Progress and Robinson Crusoe.” Journal of Semitic Studies 60:1 (Spring 2015): 177–212.

Hillier, Russell M. “‘In a Dark Parody’ of John Bunyan’s ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress’: The Presence of Subversive Allegory in Cormac McCarthy’s ‘Outer Dark.’” ANQ 19:4 (Fall 2006): 52–59.

Himy, Armand. “Errance et élection dans The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bulletin de la Société d’Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles 35 (November 1992): 57–68.

Hinchcliffe, Richard. “‘Would’st Thou be in a Dream:’ John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress and Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five.” European Journal of American Culture 20:3 (2001): 183–196.

Hindmarsh, D. Bruce. The Evangelical Conversion Narrative: Spiritual Autobiography in Early Modern England. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.

Hinds, Carol Louise. “The Implication of Puritan Principles in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century British Literature.” Ph.D. diss., University of Virginia, reprint 1988.

Hinds, Peter. Review of The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan, ed. Anne Dunan-Page. The Recorder 18 (Spring 2012): 7–8.

Hinson, E. Glenn. “Pilgrim’s Progress and Grace Abounding by John Bunyan.” In Christian Spirituality. Ed. Frank N. Magill and Ian P. McGreal, 320–325. San Francisco: Harper and Row Publishers, 1988.

Hinson, E. Glenn. “Midwives and Mothers of Grace.” The Theological Educator: A Journal of Theology and Ministry 43 (Spring 1991): 65–79. Reprinted as “Ministers as Midwives and Mothers of Grace,” Handbook of Spirituality for Ministers: Perspectives for the 21st Century, Vol 2. Ed. Robert J. Wicks, 642– 655. New York and Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2000.

Hinson, E. Glenn. “The Progression of Grace: A Re-Reading of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Spiritus: A Journal of Christian Spirituality 3:2 (Fall 2003): 251–262.

Hinson, E. Glenn. “Bunyan, John.” In The Upper Room Dictionary of Spiritual Formation. Ed. Keith Beasley-Topliffe, 46–47. Nashville, TN: Upper Room Books, 2003.

Hinson, E. Glenn. “John Bunyan as Spiritual Guide.” Baptist History and Heritage 50:1 (Spring 2015): 51–65.

Hirte, John D. “John Bunyan: Decreasing Radical.” MA thesis, James Madison University, 1990.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “John Bunyan, His Chair and a Few Other Relics: Orality, Literacy and the Limits of Area Studies.” Ph.D. thesis, University of the Witwatersrand, African Studies Institute, 1997.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Bunyan in Africa: Text, Translation, Transition.” African Studies Association of the UK – Biennial Conference 1 (1998): 1–14.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Bunyan in Africa: Text and Transition.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 3:3 (2001): 322–335.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “How Bunyan Became English: Missionaries, Translation, and the Discipline of English Literature.” Journal of British Studies 41:1 (January 2002): 84–119

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Dreams, Documents and ‘Fetishes’: African Christian Interpretations of The Pilgrim’s Progress.Journal of Religion in Africa 32:4 (November 2002): 440–456.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Portable Landscapes: Thomas Mofolo and John Bunyan in the Broad and Narrow Way.” In Disputed Territories: Land, Culture and Identity in Settler Societies. Ed. David Trigger and Gareth Griffiths, 131–153. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2003.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of The Pilgrim’s Progress. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “The Pilgrim’s Progress as World Literature: John Bunyan and George Simeon Mwase in Nyasaland.” In “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Special Feature,” in 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 13. Ed. Ken Simpson, 175–199. New York: AMS Press, 2006.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Evangelical Realism: The Transnational Making of Genre in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 119–146. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Towards a History of the Book and Literary Culture in Africa.” In Literary Cultures and the Material Book. Ed. Simon Eliot, Andrew Nash, and Ian Willison, 121–132. London: British Library, 2007.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Bunyan: Colonial, Postcolonial.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 162–176. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Hofmeyr, Isabel. “Mata’s Hermeneutic: Internationally Made Ways of Reading Bunyan.” In The History of Reading: A Reader. Ed. Shafquat Towheed, Rosalind Crone, and Katie Halsey, 402–410. London: Routledge, 2011.

Hoftijzer, P. G. Review of Johannes Boekholt (1656–1693): The First Dutch Publisher of John Bunyan and Other English Authors, by J. B. H. Alblas. Nederlands Archief voor Kerkgeschiedenis / Dutch Review of Church History 68:2 (1988): 273–275.

Holland, Richard James. “The Debate between John Bunyan and Edward Burrough 1656–7.” M.Phil thesis, University of Birmingham, 2005.

Holmes, Caitlin Cornell. “‘Sole Author, I’: Isolation and the Devotional Self in Early Modern English Literature.” Ph.D. diss., Washington State University, 2013.

Holtrop, P. N., Frederik de Lange, and Riemer Roukema, eds. Passion of Protestants. Kampen: Kok, 2004.

Horlacher, Stefan, Stefan Glomb, and Lars Heiler, eds. Taboo and Transgression in British Literature from the Renaissance to the Present. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

Horn, Matthew Clive. “(En)countering Death: Defenses Against Mortality in Five Late Medieval/Early Modern Texts.” Ph.D. diss., Kent State University, 2010.

Horner, Barry E. The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Themes and Issues: An Evangelical Apologetic. Lindenhurst, N.Y.: Reformation Press, 1998. Revised edition under title John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress: Themes and Issues. Darlington, UK: Evangelical Press/Vestavia Hills, AL: Solid Ground Christian Books, 2003.

Horner, Barry E. The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan: The Outlined Study Manual. Lindenhurst, NY: Reformation Press, 1999.

Howard, Elizabeth. “A Review of Sharon Achinstein’s Plenary Address, ‘John Bunyan and the Politics of Remembrance.’” The Recorder 8 (2002): 11.

Howat, Irene. Ten Boys Who Used Their Talents. Fearn, Scotland: Christian Focus, 2006. Chapter 10, “John Bunyan,” 133–143. [Biography for children.]

Howles, Lynne. The King’s Highway: A Modern Adaptation of Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ilkeston: Moorley, 1993.

Howse, Christopher. Best Sermons Ever. London; New York: Continuum, 2001.

Hudnell, Marianne. “Print Culture and John Bunyan: Christian’s Reading in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” MA thesis, Howard University, 1997.

Hudson, Brett A. “John Bunyan, Pilgrim’s Progress, and Nonconformist Prison Literature.” In Prison Narratives from Boethius to Zana. Ed. Philip Edward Phillips, 79–96. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.

Hughes, Ann. “The Pulpit Guarded: Confrontations between Orthodox and Radicals in Revolutionary England.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 31–50. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Hughes, Christina, and Malcolm Tight. “The Metaphors we Study by: The Doctorate as a Journey and/or as Work.” Higher Education Research and Development 32:5 (2013): 765–775. [Develops an extended analogy between The Pilgrim’s Progress and the experience of the doctoral student.]

Humphries, Simon. “Christina Rossetti’s ‘Goblin Market’ and Bunyan’s Orchard of Beelzebub.” Notes & Queries 55:1 (March 2008): 49–51.

Hunkin, Oliver, and Alan Parry. Dangerous Journey. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, reprint 1990.

Hurry, Patricia, and Alan F. Cirket, Alan F. John Bunyan Museum Library Catalogue. Bedford: Bunyan Meeting Free Church, 1995; 2nd edn. 2004; 3rd edn. 2007.

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 Jackson, Dave, and Neta Jackson. Hero Tales: A Family Treasury of True Stories from the Lives of Christian Heroes. Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1997.

Jackson, Gregory S. “The Novel as Board Game: Homiletic Identification and Forms of Interactive Narrative.” In The Oxford Handbook of Nineteenth-Century American Literature. Ed. Russ Castronovo, 235–251. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.

Jackson, Gregory S. “A Game Theory of Evangelical Fiction.” Critical Inquiry 39:3 (Spring 2013): 451–485.

Jacobs, Alan. Poetry for the Spirit: An Original Anthology of Insightful Poems. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 2003.

Jagodzinski, Cecile M. Privacy and Print: Reading and Writing in Seventeenth-Century England. Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1999. Especially Chapter 2, “Authoring the Private Self: Reading in Seventeenth-Century Conversion Narratives,” 49–73.

James, John. “Tortuous and Complicated: An Analysis of Conversion in John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” Foundations 67 (November 2014): 43–59.

James, Steven. Quest for Celestia: A Reimagining of The Pilgrim’s Progress. Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2006.

Jeffrey, David Lyle. People of the Book: Christian Identity and Literary Culture. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1996.

Jeffrey, David Lyle. Houses of the Interpreter: Reading Scripture, Reading Culture. Waco: Baylor University Press, 2003.

Jeffrey, David Lyle. “Bunyan, John (1628–1688).” In Biographical Dictionary of Evangelicals. Ed. Timothy Larsen, 98–102. Leicester, UK: Inter-Varsity Press, 2003.

Jendrysik, Mark Stephen. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves. Utopian Studies 14:1 (2003): 206–208.

Jenkins, Thelma H. John Bunyan’s The Holy War: A Modern English Version. Darlington: Evangelical Press, 2003.

Jinkins, Michael. Review of Bunyan the Christian by Gordon Wakefield. Scottish Journal of Theology 50:4 (November 1997): 505–506.

“John Bunyan and Mince-Pies.” Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal 424:17 (1 March 2006): 30.

Johnson, Barbara A. “Falling into Allegory: The ‘Apology’ to The Pilgrim’s Progress and Bunyan’s Scriptural Methodology.” In Bunyan in Our Time. Ed. Robert G. Collmer, 113–137. Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 1989.

Johnson, Barbara A. Reading Piers Plowman and The Pilgrim’s Progress: Reception and the Protestant Reader. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1992.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of A Tinker and a Poor Man: John Bunyan and His Church, 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill; Bunyan the Christian, by Gordon Wakefield; and Discourses of Martyrdom in English Literature, 1563–1694, by John R. Knott. Perspectives in Religious Studies 22:3 (Fall 1995): 318–322.

Johnson, Galen K. “Teaching The Pilgrim’s Progress.” The Recorder 3:2 (Winter 1996): 18–20.

Johnson, Galen K. “The Case that Baptists Can Claim Bunyan.” The Recorder 4:1 (Spring 1997): 17–19.

Johnson, Galen K. “Supra or Infra? Clarifying Bunyan’s Doctrine of Election.” The Recorder 6 (2000): 6–7. Reprinted in Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from the Recorder, 1999–2008. Ed. Ken Simpson, 8–12. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

Johnson, Galen K. “‘Be Not Extream’: The Limits of Theory in Reading John Bunyan.” Christianity and Literature 49 (2000): 447–64.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community, ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck. Christianity and Literature 49:4 (Summer 2000): 540–543.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Bunyan and Authority: The Rhetoric of Dissent and the Legitimation Crisis in Seventeenth-Century England, by Stuart Sim and David Walker. Perspectives in Religious Studies 27:3 (Fall 2000): 322–326.

Johnson, Galen K. “Muhammad and Ideology in Medieval Christian Literature.” Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 11:3 (October 2000): 333–346.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of The Hidden Smile of God: The Fruit of Affliction in the Lives of John Bunyan, William Cowper, and David Brainerd, by John Piper. Perspectives in Religious Studies 28:2 (Summer 2001): 191–194.

Johnson, Galen K. “Suicide and the Keys of Escape in Bunyan and Donne.” Bunyan Studies 10 (2001/2002): 46–64.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of The Key in the Window: Marginal Notes in Bunyan’s Narratives, by Maxine Hancock. Christianity and Literature 51:4 (Summer 2002): 670.

Johnson, Galen K. Prisoner of Conscience: John Bunyan on Self, Community and Christian Faith. Carlisle, UK: Paternoster Press, 2003.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing, ed. N. H. Keeble. The Recorder 9 (2003): 12–13.

Johnson, Galen K. “The Conflicted Puritan Inheritance of John Bunyan’s Political Writings.” Baptist History and Heritage 38:2 (Spring 2003): 103–115.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves; and Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Writings of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. Christianity and Literature 52:4 (Summer 2003): 577–581.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Pilgrimage: The English Experience from Becket to Bunyan, ed. Colin Morris and Peter Roberts. Fides et Historia 35:2 (Summer/Fall 2003): 163–165.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Writings of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. Calvin Theological Journal 39: 1 (April 2004): 196–197.

Johnson, Galen K. “Depictions of the Fall Compared in Milton’s Paradise Lost and Bunyan’s The Holy War.” Baptist Quarterly 41 (April 2005): 80–91.

Johnson, Galen K. “Of Bowels and Bigotry: Reading John Wesley’s Editions of John Bunyan’s Fictions.” Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen 242:1 (2005): 40–57.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of the Pilgrim’s Progress, by Isabel Hofmeyr. Christianity and Literature 54:2 (Winter 2005): 287–289.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Grace Overwhelming: John Bunyan, The Pilgrim’s Progress, and the Extremes of the Baptist Mind, by Anne Dunan-Page. The Recorder 13 (2007): 11.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of “Bunyan and the Politics of Grace,” by Paul Stevens, Opening Plenary Session for the Fifth Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire. The Recorder 14 (2008): 3.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of John Bunyan’s Master Story: The Holy War as Battle Allegory in Religious and Biblical Context, by Daniel Virgil Runyon. The Recorder 15 (Spring 2009): 3–4.

Johnson, Galen K. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera J. Camden. Christianity & Literature 59:1 (Autumn 2009): 136–139.

Johnson, Galen K. “The Pilgrim’s Progress in the History of American Public Discourse.” LATCH: A Journal for the Study of the Literary Artifact in Theory, Culture, or History 4 (2011): 1–31.

Johnson, J. Austin. “States of Grace in Early Modern Literature.” Ph.D. diss., Southern Methodist University, 2013.

Johnson, Rachel. “Pilgrims: The MacDonalds and John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” North Wind: Journal of the George MacDonald Society 21 (2002): 15–25.

Johnston, Leon. “John Bunyan’s Conversion in Grace Abounding and The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Parallel Study.” MA thesis, Briercrest Biblical Seminary, 2000.

Johnston, Warren. Revelation Restored: The Apocalypse in Later Seventeenth-Century England. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2011.

Johnstone, Nathan. “The Protestant Devil: The Experience of Temptation in Early Modern England.” Journal of British Studies 43:2 (April 2004): 173–205.

Jones, Robert D. “A Tale of Two ‘Scripture Pilgrims’: A Selective Comparison of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress and Wu Cheng’En’s The Journey to the West.” Th.M. thesis, Regent College, 2013.

Jung, Joanne Joe. “Conference: Rediscovering a Communal Tradition of Puritan Piety.” Ph.D. diss., Fuller Theological Seminary, 2007.

Jung, Joanne J. Godly Conversation: Rediscovering the Puritan Practice of Conference (Grand Rapids, MI: Reformation Heritage Books, 2011).

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Kahn, Eve M. “Back When Theater Was Simply Unrolled.” The New York Times (3 December 2010): 32.

Kambasković-Sawers, Danijela. “Fictional Elements in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Sonnet Sequences and Early Modern Fictions.” Parergon 29:1 (2012): 47–69.

Kapic, Kelly M., and Randall C. Gleason, eds. The Devoted Life: An Invitation to the Puritan Classics. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2004.

Kari, Daven M. “John Bunyan.” In Cyclopedia of World Authors, 4th edn. Ed. Dayton Kohler, 154. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 2003.

Kaufmann, U. Milo. “Spiritual Discerning: Bunyan and the Mysteries of the Divine Will.” In John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 171–188. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

Kaufmann, U. Milo. “The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Pilgrim’s Regress: John Bunyan and C. S. Lewis on the Shape of the Christian Quest.” In Bunyan in Our Time. Ed. Robert G. Collmer, 186–199. Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 1989.

Kaufmann, U. Milo. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves. Seventeenth-Century News 61:3–4 (Fall–Winter 2003): 214–216.

Kaufmann, U. Milo. Review of Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. Seventeenth Century News 62:1/2 (Spring/Summer 2004): 21–24.

Kaufmann, U. Milo. Review of The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan, ed. Anne Dunan-Page. Seventeenth-Century News 69: 3–4 (Fall–Winter 2011): 134–136.

Kazunori, Kawasaki. “Bunyan’s view of Salvation in Law and Grace: His Strict Calvinism and Covenant Theology.” Tohoku: Essays and Studies in English Language and Literature 36 (2002): 77–98.

Kean, Margaret. “Is this the Way? The Improving Fictions of Bunyan, Milton and Philip Pullman.” The Glass 17 (Spring 2005): 4–15.

Keeble, N. H., ed. John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus: Tercentenary Essays. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988.

Keeble, N. H. “‘Of him thousands daily Sing and talk’: Bunyan and his Reputation.” In John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 241–264. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988.

Keeble, N. H. “‘Here is her Glory, even to be under Him:’ The Feminine in the Thought and Work of John Bunyan.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 131–148. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Keeble, N. H. Review of John Bunyan in Context, by Michael A. Mullett. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 48:3 (July 1997): 583–584.

Keeble, N. H. “‘Till one greater man / Restore us…’: Restoration Images in Bunyan and Milton.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 27–50. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000; previously published in Bunyan Studies 6 (1995/96): 6–33.

Keeble, N. H. “John Bunyan.” In Spiritual Stars of the Millennium. Ed. Selina O’Grady and John Wilkins, 84–86. London: Continuum, 2001.

Keeble, N. H., ed. The Cambridge Companion to the Writing of the English Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.

Keeble, N. H., ed. John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

Keeble, N. H. “‘To be a pilgrim’: Constructing the Protestant Life in Early Modern England.” In Pilgrimage: The English Experience from Becket to Bunyan. Ed. Colin Morris and Peter Roberts, 238–256. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.

Keeble, N. H. Review of The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Isabel Hofmeyr. Translation and Literature 14:2 (2005): 252–255.

Keeble, N. H. “John Bunyan.” In The Milton Encyclopedia. Ed. Thomas N. Corns, 48. Cambridge, MA: Yale University Press, 2008.

Keeble, N. H. “Puritan Literature.” In The Cambridge Companion to Puritanism. Ed. John Coffey and Paul Chang-Ha Lim, 309–324. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.

Keeble, N. H. “John Bunyan’s Literary Life.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 13–25. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Keeble, N. H. “‘Out of the spoils won in Battel’: John Bunyan.” In The Oxford Handbook of Literature and the English Revolution. Ed. Laura Lunger Knoppers, 686–702. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.

Keeble, N. H. “Bunyan’s King.” Bunyan Studies 19 (2015): 12–34.

Keen, Suzanne. “Interior Description and Perspective in Deloney and Bunyan.” Style 48:4 (Winter 2014): 496–512.

Kerr, Hugh T., and John M. Mulder. Famous Conversions: The Christian Experience. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, reprint 1994, 1996.

Kickasola, Matthew Louis. “Vaughan Williams and The Pilgrim’s Progress in the 20th Century.” MA thesis, Washington University, 2004.

Kiely, Robert. “Angelic Discourse or Unstable Allegory? The Play of the Literal and Figurative in Augustine’s Confessions, The Little Flowers of St. Francis, and Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” Stanford Literature Review 5:1–2 (Spring/Fall 1988): 105–130.

Killingley, Siew-Yue. The Pilgrim’s Progress, Adapted as a Play with Embellishments. Newcastle upon Tyne: Grevatt & Grevatt, 2002.

Kim, Sung-Kyoon. “A Study of Bunyan’s Mr. Badman: ‘An Embryo Novel.’” The Journal of English Language and Literature 35:3 (Autumn 1989): 407–427.

King, Andrew. “Sir Bevis of Hampton: Renaissance Influence and Reception.” In “Sir Bevis of Hampton” in Literary Tradition. Ed. Jennifer Fellows and Ivana Djordjević, 176–191. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2008.

Kirkman, Robert. “On Collecting John Bunyan.” Rare Book Review (April 2005): 32–35.

Kirkman, Robert. John Bunyan, 1628–1688: Old, Rare and Interesting Editions, Antique Prints, and Commemorative China. Kings Cottage (Summer 2008): www.robertkirkman.co.uk

Knecht, Glen C. Review of Grace Abounding: The Life, Books and Influence of John Bunyan, by David B. Calhoun. Presbyterion 33:2 (Fall 2007): 125–126.

Knoppers, Laura L. “Bunyan’s Judges.” Bunyan Studies 19 (2015): 53–75.

Knott, John. “‘Thou must live upon my Word’: Bunyan and the Bible.” In John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 153–170. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

Knott, John. Discourses of Martyrdom in English Literature, 1563–1694. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Knott, John R. “‘A Suffering People’: Bunyan and the Language of Martyrdom.” In Puritanism: Transatlantic Perspectives on a Seventeenth-Century Anglo-American Faith. Ed. Francis J. Bremer, 88–123. Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1993.

Knott, John. “Bunyan and the Cry of Blood.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 51–67. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Koeijer, Reinier Wilhelm de. “Geestelijke strijd bij de puriteinen: een spiritualiteit-historisch onderzoek naar Engelse puriteinse geschriften in de periode 1587–1684.” [“Spiritual Warfare in Puritanism: A historical study of English Puritan spiritual writings between 1587 and 1684.”] Ph.D. diss., Utrecht University, 2010; published by Utrecht: De Banier, 2010.

Korsten, Frans. “Froude and Bunyan.” Neophilologus 77:3 (1993): 489–497.

Kosyakov, Gennady. “Bunyan in Russian Literature.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 96–103.

Kozdrin, Peter. “Bunyan and Pushkin: A Cross-Cultural Dialogue.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 104–13.

Kuenning, Larry. “The Bunyan-Burrough Debate of 1656–57 Analyzed Using a Computer Hypertext.” Ph.D. diss., Westminster Theological Seminary, 2000.

Küsgen, Reinhardt. “‘The Snows of Kilimanjaro: Hemingway, Bunyan und die Welt der Romance.” In Motive and Themen in englischsprachiger Literatur als Indiakatoren literaturgeschichtlicher Prozesse. Ed. Heinz-Joachim Müllenbrock and Alfons Klein, 361–375. Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1990.

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Ladd, C. J. John Bunyan: The Man and the Book He Wrote. Addison, IL: Bible Truth Publishers, 1997.

Lai, John. “Tianlu licheng hanyi banben kaocha” [A study of The Pilgrim’s Progress in Chinese translated versions]. Waiyu yu fanyi [Foreign languages and translation] 52 (2007): 26–40.

Lai, Tsz Pang John. The Afterlife of a Classic: A Critical Study of the Chinese Translations of The Pilgrim’s Progress. Hong Kong: Christian Study Centre on Chinese Religion and Culture, 2012.

Lai, Tsz-pang. “A Critical Study of the Chinese Translations of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” M.Phil. thesis, University of Hong Kong, 2000.

Laine, Tuija. “John Bunyan’s Long Way to Sweden and Finland in the Eighteenth Century.” Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 121–134.

Laine, Tuija. “English Puritan Literature in the Swedish Realm in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries – Translation Phases.” Journal for the History of Reformed Pietism 1:1 (2015): 35–55.

Lamont, William. Review of John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus: Tercentenary Essays, ed. N. H. Keeble. Journal of Theological Studies 40:1 (April 1989): 307–309.

Lamont, William. “Bunyan and Baxter.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 39–58. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

Lang, Bernhard. “Meeting in Heaven according to John Bunyan in The Pilgrim’s Progress. With a Note on an Illustration by William Blake.” In Tod und Jenseits in der Schriftkultur der Frühen Neuzeit. Ed. Marion Kobelt-Groch and Cornelia Niekus Moore, 119–35. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag in Kommission, 2008.

Lang, Bernhard. Meeting in Heaven: Modernising the Christian Afterlife, 1600–2000. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2011. Especially Chapter 3: “The English Heaven. An Exploration of The Pilgrim’s Progress (1678/84),” 43–59.

Lang, Bernhard. “Wiedersehen im Himmel. John Bunyan, The Pilgrim’s Progress (1678/84). Mit Hinweis auf eine Illustration von William Blake.” In Buch der Kriege – Buch des Himmels: Kleine Schriften zur Exegese und Theologie, 201–220. Leuven: Peeters, 2011.

Lares, Jameela. Review of “Dissociation and Decapitation,” by Peter Rudnytsky, Plenary Lecture for the Third Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society at Kent State University, Ohio. The Recorder 8 (2002): 5–6.

Lares, Jameela. Review of “Milton, Bunyan, the Holy Nation, and Trials of Toleration,” by Elizabeth Sauer, Plenary Address for the Fifth Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire. The Recorder 14 (2008): 4.

Lares, Jameela. “Bunyan’s Progress and Glanvill’s Stand: Narration and Stasis in Later Seventeenth-Century English Religious Discourse.” In New Chapters in the History of Rhetoric. Ed. Laurent Pernot, 565–573. Leiden: Brill, 2009.

Larsen, Dan. The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Modern-Day Abridgment for Today’s Reader. Uhrichsville, OH: Barbour, 1995.

Lauerma, Petri. “Vieraiden grafeemien väistyminen varhaisnykysuomesta: Etenkin Jakob Johan Malmbergin tuotannon valossa.” [“The abandonment of foreign graphemes in Early Modern Finnish with special reference to Jakob Johan Malmberg’s works” – makes particular reference to Malmberg’s translation of The Pilgrim’s Progress.] Virittäjä 111:3 (2007): 322–345.

Laurence, Anne. “Bunyan and the Parliamentary Army.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 16–29. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Laurence, Anne, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, eds. John Bunyan and his England, 1628–1688. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Lawrence, Edward K. Pilgrim’s Progress: A Modern Adaptation of the Book by John Bunyan. Houston: Valid Angel Comics, 1990.

Lawson, Gilchrist J. Deeper Experiences of Famous Christians. New Kensington, PA: Whitaker House, 1998.

Lawson, Gilchrist J. When God’s Spirit Falls: How Renowned Christians Received the Holy Spirit. New Kensington, PA: Whitaker House, 2007.

Leary, David E. “New Insights into William James’s Personal Crisis in the Early 1870s: Part II. John Bunyan and the Resolution and Consequences of the Crisis.” William James Studies 11 (2015): 28–45.

Le Bon, Pierre. “Poésie et Écriture dans Grace Abounding de John Bunyan.” Réperages 10 (1988): 25–40.

le Cat, Michel L. H. M., ed. Willem Heijting, with Sandra van Daalen. Protestantism Crossing the Seas: A Short-Title Catalogue of English Books Printed Before 1801 Illustrating the Spread of Protestant Thought and the Exchange of Ideas between the English-Speaking Countries and the Netherlands, Held by the University Library of the Vrije Universiteit at Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Hes & de Graaf, 2000.

Lei, Sharon. “To ‘make a travailer of thee’: A Study of John Bunyan’s Pastoral Theology with Particular Focus on Assurance.” Ph.D. diss., Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 2014.

Leigh, David J. Review of Prisoner of Conscience: John Bunyan on Self, Community and Christian Faith, by Galen K. Johnson. Christianity and Literature 56:1 (Autumn 2006): 178–180.

Leigh, David J. “Narrative, Ritual, and Irony in Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” Journal of Narrative Theory 39:1 (Winter 2009): 1–29.

Lemon, Rebecca, Emma Mason, Jonathan Roberts, and Christopher Rowland, eds. The Blackwell Companion to the Bible in English Literature. Oxford/Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

Leonard, Bill J. “Early Baptists and the Ten Commandments.” Perspectives in Religious Studies 35:4 (Winter 2008): 387–391.

Leudar, Ivan, and Wes Sharrock. “The Cases of John Bunyan, Part 1: Taine and Royce.” History of Psychiatry 13:3 (August 2002): 247–265.

Leudar, Ivan, and Wes Sharrock. “The Cases of John Bunyan, Part 2: James and Janet.” History of Psychiatry 13:4 (October 2002): 401–417.

Levens, Laura. “John Bunyan and the Baptist Academy: An Editorial Introduction.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 259–262.

Lewis, Linda M. Dickens, His Parables, and His Reader. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 2011. Especially Chapter 1, “The Child as Christian Pilgrim in Oliver Twist and The Old Curiosity Shop,” 22–56. [Discusses Dickens’s use of motifs from The Pilgrim’s Progress in these works.]

Lewis, Rhodri. Review of Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community, ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck. Notes & Queries 49:2 (June 2002): 298–299.

Li, Zixiu. “A Simple and Refined Allegorical Novel: On the Language Features of Pilgrim’s Progress.” Wai guo yu/Journal of Foreign Languages 6:58 (December 1988): 37–42.

Light, Alfred W. Bunhill Fields: Written in Honour and to the Memory of the Many Saints of God whose Bodies Rest in this Old London Cemetery. Repr. London: C. J. Farncombe & Sons, 2009 [reprinted from 1915].

Light, A. W., and J. H. Gordon. John Bunyan, 1628–1688. London: Focus Christian Ministries Trust, 1988.

Lin, Lin. “Spiritual Sympathy of Pilgrim’s Progress and Journey to the West – A Comparison in Religious Features and Critical Spirit Between Two Novels.” Journal of Quanzhou Normal University (2005), issue 5: 83–87.

Lindsay, Jack. John Bunyan: Maker of Myths. London: London Borough of Hillingdon, reprint 1993.

Liu, Yan, and Wenjun Li. “A Comparison of the Themes of The Journey to the West and The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Theory and Practice in Language Studies 3:7 (July 2013): 1243–1249.

Liu, Ying. “All Routes of Soul Lead to the Same Destiny – Comparison between A Journey to the West and The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Science & Technology Information (2010), issue 35: 245 and 277.

Loane, Marcus L. Makers of Puritan History: Biographical Studies of Alexander Henderson, Samuel Rutherford, John Bunyan, Richard Baxter. Repr. Edinburgh: Banner of Truth Trust, 2009 [reprinted from 1961].

Lobsien, Verena O. Jenseitsästhetik: Literarische Räume Letzter Dinge. Berlin: Berlin UP, 2012. Especially chapter 4, “Der Weg Dorthin: John Bunyan,” 238–265.

Lorenz, Angela. Life, Life, Eternal Life: Uncle Wiggily Meets The Pilgrim’s Progress. Bologna, Italy: Angela Lorenz, 2006.

Luder, Liz J. “Bunyan Matters.” Journal of the RVW Society 38 (March 2007): 17.

Luecke, Marilyn Serraino. “‘God hath made no difference such as men would:’ Margaret Fell and the Politics of Women’s Speech.” Bunyan Studies 7 (1997): 73–95.

Lund, Mary Ann. “Bunyan and the Tradition of ‘Pastoral’ Writing in Early Modern England.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 6–21.

Lundin, Anne. “Little Pilgrims’ Progress: Literary Horizons for Children’s Literature.” Libraries & Culture 41.1 (2006): 133–152.

Luxon, Thomas H. “Calvin and Bunyan on Word and Image: Is There a Text in Interpreter’s House?” English Literary Renaissance 18 (1988): 438–459.

Luxon, Thomas H. Review of The Miscellaneous Works of John Bunyan, vol. 5, ed. Graham Midgley. Modern Philology 86:2 (November 1988): 205–210.

Luxon, Thomas H. “‘Not I, but Christ’: Allegory and the Puritan Self.” ELH 60:4 (Winter 1993): 899–937.

Luxon, Thomas H. “‘Other Mens Words’ and ‘New Birth:’ Bunyan’s Antihermeneutics of Experience.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 36:3 (Fall 1994): 259–290.

Luxon, Thomas H. Literal Figures: Puritan Allegory and the Reformation Crisis in Representation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.

Luxon, Thomas H. Review of Reading Piers Plowman and The Pilgrim’s Progress: Reception and the Protestant Reader, by Barbara A. Johnson. Seventeenth-Century News 55:3–4 (Fall–Winter 1997): 61–62.

Luxon, Thomas H. Review of John Bunyan in Context, by Michael A. Mullett. Journal of Religion 78:1 (January 1998): 121–122.

Luxon, Thomas H. Review of Bunyan and Authority: The Rhetoric of Dissent and the Legitimation Crisis in Seventeenth-Century England, by Stuart Sim and David Walker. The Recorder 7 (2001): 15–17.

Luxon, Thomas H. Review of Graceful Reading: Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan, by Michael Davies. The Recorder 12 (2006): 11–12.

Luxon, Thomas H. “One Soul Versus One Flesh: Friendship, Marriage, and the Puritan Self.” In Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan. Ed. Vera J. Camden, 81–99. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.

Lynch, Beth. “‘Rather Dark to Readers in General:’ Some Critical Casualties of John Bunyan’s Holy War (1682).” Bunyan Studies 9 (1999/2000): 25–49.

Lynch, Beth. John Bunyan and the Language of Conviction. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell, 2004.

Lynch, Beth. “Uses and Abuses: John Bunyan, Phillip Stubbes, and the Ambiguity of Literary Influence.” The Seventeenth Century 22:2 (Autumn 2007): 283–304.

Lynch, Beth. “Bunyan’s ‘Certain Place’: Fleeing Esau in the 1670s.” In Religion, Culture and National Community in the 1670s. Ed. Tony Claydon and Thomas N. Corns, 66–84. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011.

Lynch, Kathleen. “‘Her Name Agnes’: The Verifications of Agnes Beaumont’s Narrative Ventures.” ELH 67:1 (Spring 2000): 71–98.

Lynch, Kathleen. “Into Jail and into Print: John Bunyan Writes the Godly Self.” The Huntington Library Quarterly 72:2 (2009): 273–290.

Lynch, Kathleen. Protestant Autobiography in the Seventeenth-Century Anglophone World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. Especially Chapter 4, “Writing Religious Identities in Bedford: Exemplary Lives in Historical Perspective,” 179–232.

Lynch, Kathleen. “Conversion Narratives in Old and New England.” In The Oxford Handbook of Literature and the English Revolution. Ed. Laura Lunger Knoppers, 425–441. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.

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MacDonald, Michael. “The Fearefull Estate of Francis Spira: Narrative, Identity, and Emotion in Early Modern England.” Journal of British Studies 31:1 (January 1992): 32–61.

MacDonald, Ruth K. Christian’s Children: The Influence of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress on American Children’s Literature. New York: Peter Lang, 1989.

Machosky, Brenda. “Trope and Truth in The Pilgrim’s Progress.” SEL: Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 47:1 (Winter 2007): 179–198.

Machosky, Brenda. Review of The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan, ed. Anne Dunan-Page. Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660–1700 35:2 (Fall 2011): 62–64.

MacIntyre, Wendell P. “John Bunyan’s ‘Celestial City’ and Oliver Cromwell’s ‘Ideal Society.’” Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses 3 (November 1990): 77–88.

Mackenzie, Donald. “Rhetoric versus Apocalypse: The Oratory of The Holy War.” Bunyan Studies 2:1 (Spring 1990): 33–45.

MacLennan, George. Lucid Interval: Subjective Writing and Madness in History. Leicester: Leicester University Press, 1992. Chapter 3: “Bunyan and Trosse: The Pathology of Puritanism,” 55–77.

Maddux, H. Clark. “Audience and the Layered Art of Method in John Bunyan’s The Life and Death of Mr. Badman and The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Special Feature,” in 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 13. Ed. Ken Simpson, 265–286. New York: AMS Press, 2006.

Madsen, David. “Weaver of Allegory: John Bunyan’s Use of the Medieval Theme of Vice and Virtue as Devotional Writer and Social Critic in The Holy War.” M.A. thesis, Liberty University, 2013.

Magill, Frank Northen. Critical Survey of Long Fiction, English Language Series. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 1991.

Magill, Frank Northen, and Dayton Kohler. Masterplots: 1,801 Plot Stories and Critical Evaluations of the World’s Finest Literature, Volume 9: Pet-Ric. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 1996.

Mailloux, Steven. “Persuasions Good and Bad: Bunyan, Iser, and Fish on Rhetoric and Hermeneutics.” Studies in the Literary Imagination 28:2 (Fall 1995): 43–61.

Mailloux, Steven. Reception Histories: Rhetoric, Pragmatism, and American Cultural Politics. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1998. Chapter 5, “Good and Bad Persuasions: Critics Reading Bunyan,” 103–127.

Maniquis, Robert. “Teaching The Pilgrim’s Progress and Robinson Crusoe; or, from Filthy Mire to the Glory of Things.” In Approaches to Teaching Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. Ed. Maximillian E. Novak and Carl Fisher, 25–36. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2005.

Manlove, C. N. “The Image of the Journey in Pilgrim’s Progress: Narrative Versus Allegory.” Journal of Narrative Technique 10 (1998): 16–38.

Manning, Robert. “The Pilgrim’s Progress: A Vindication and Celebration of Vaughan Williams’ Neglected Masterpiece.” Bunyan Studies 6 (1995/96): 70–77.

Manning, Roger B. Review of A Tinker and A Poor Man: John Bunyan and His Church, 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill. American Historical Review 95:5 (December 1990): 1532–1533.

Marbais, Peter. “The Tormented Body in The Life and Death of Mr. Badman.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 231–244. Bern; Oxford: Peter Lang, 2002.

Margutti, Vivian Bernardes. “Peregrinos em busca: alegoria, utopia e distopia em Paul Auster, Nathaniel Hawthorne e John Bunyan.” D.Litt. thesis, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (Brazil), 2010.

Markos, Louis. Heaven and Hell: Visions of the Afterlife in the Western Poetic Tradition. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2013. Chapter 20, “Bunyan and Donne: Death and Beyond,” 148–156.

Marroni, Francesco. “Ulysses e l’intertestualità joyciana: John Bunyan in un segment di Oxen of the Sun.” In Intoro a Joyce: Cinquant’anni dopo. Ed. Mirella Billi, Benedetta Bini, and Paola Splendore, 73–87. Bologna: Cosmopoli, 1995.

Marrott, Deborah R. “Bunyan’s Progress: The Author’s Journey Toward Wholeness.” MA thesis, Brigham Young University, 1991.

Marshall, David N. An Introduction to the Life and Works of John Bunyan. Chester, UK: Bishopsgate, 1989.

Martin, Todd W. “The Enormous Room: e. e. Cummings’ Modern Rendering of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Ph.D. diss., Baylor University, 1998.

Martindale, Wayne. Journey to the Celestial City: Glimpses of Heaven from Great Literary Classics. Chicago: Moody Press, 1995.

Mason, Emma. “The Victorians and Bunyan’s Legacy.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 150–161. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Massa, Conrad. Review of John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress: A Retelling, by Gary D. Schmidt. Princeton Seminary Bulletin 17:2 (1996): 260–261.

Maxwell, Julie. “Early Modern Religious Prose.” In The Blackwell Companion to the Bible in English Literature. Ed. Rebecca Lemon, Emma Mason, Jonathan Roberts, and Christopher Rowland, 184–196. Oxford/Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.

May, Lynn E., Jr. “Shaping Influences on Baptist Church Music.” Baptist History and Heritage 27:2 (April 1992): 3–41.

McCarver, Aaron Lee. “A Critical Survey of the Literary Genres of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” M.A. thesis, Mississippi College, 1990.

McCaughrean, Geraldine. John Bunyan’s A Pilgrim’s Progress, Retold. London: Hodder Children’s, 1999.

McCurdy, Ted. “A Teacher’s Guide to Understanding The Pilgrim’s Progress.” MA thesis, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, 2006.

McGiffert, Michael. “John Bunyan, Federalist: Of Parchment Rolls and Covenants.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 85–95.

McIntosh, Mark A. “Crying to Follow a Call. Vocation and Discernment in Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Revisiting the Idea of Vocation: Theological Explorations. Ed. John C. Haughey, S.J., 119–140. Washington: Catholic University of America Press, 2004.

McIntosh, Mark A. Discernment and Truth: The Spirituality and Theology of Knowledge (New York: Crossroad, 2004). Especially chapter 6, “Discerning a Divine Calling: Vocation and Truth in Pilgrim’s Progress,” 149–165, and pages 73–81 of chapter 2, “Historical Landscape: Middle Ages to Modernity.”

McKelvey, Robert J. “ʻHistories that Mansoul, and her Wars Anatomize:’ The Drama of Redemption in John Bunyan’s Holy War.” Ph.D. diss., Westminster Theological Seminary, 2004.

McKelvey, Robert J. “Samuel Adams and the 1782 edition of The Holy War.” The Recorder 12 (2006): 6–7. Reprinted in Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from the Recorder, 1999–2008. Ed. Ken Simpson, 22–28. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

McKelvey, Robert J. Review of Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent, by Richard L. Greaves. Westminster Theological Journal 69 (Spring 2007): 203–205.

McKelvey, Robert J. Histories that Mansoul and her Wars Anatomize: The Drama of Redemption in John Bunyan’s Holy War. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011.

McLean, Glenn Anthony. “John Bunyan’s Women: A Study of Representation in Bunyan.” Honors thesis, Flinders University, 2004.

Meek, Donald. “John Bunyan in the Kilt: The Influence of Bunyan Texts on Religious Expression and Experience in the Scottish Highlands and Islands.” Scottish Studies 37 (2014): 155–163.

Mehdi, Rachid. “John Bunyan et la Bible: les images bibliques dans The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Doctoral dissertation, Université du Maine, 2013.

Mentz, Steve. “Brown.” In Prismatic Ecology: Ecotheory Beyond Green. Ed. Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, 193–212. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2013. [Explores brown environments in Spenser, Bunyan, and Shakespeare.]

Mercer, Jackson F. “Keeping the Vision: A Course in Historic Baptist Discipleship in Response to the Ascendancy of Fundamentalism in the Southern Baptist Convention with Reference to John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” D.Min. diss., Princeton Theological Seminary, 1991.

Michie, Allen. “Between Calvin and Calvino: Postmodernism and Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bucknell Review 41:2 (1998): 37–56.

Mignon, Laurent. “A Pilgrim’s Progress: Armenian and Kurdish Literatures in Turkish and the Rewriting of Literary History.” Patterns of Prejudice 48:2 (2014): 182–200.

Miles, Margaret A. “Pilgrimage as a Metaphor in a Nuclear Age.” Theology Today 45 (July 1988): 166–179.

Milne, Kirsty. “‘The Miracles They Wrought:’ A Chapbook Reading of The Pilgrim’s Progress, with an Edited Transcript of The Pilgrims Progress to the Other World (1684).” Bunyan Studies 13 (2008/2009): 40–63.

Milne, Kirsty. “Early Modern Religion and Literature in Old and New England.” Review of the Fifth Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire: 15–19 August 2007. Bunyan Studies 13 (2008/2009): 107–109.

Milne, Kirsty. “Reforming Bartholomew Fair: Bunyan, Jonson, and the Puritan Point of View.” Huntington Library Quarterly 74:2 (June 2011): 289–308.

Milne, Kirsty. “Vanity Fair from Bunyan to Thackeray: Transformations of a Trope.” D.Phil. diss., University of Oxford, 2012.

Milne, Kirsty. At Vanity Fair: From Bunyan to Thackeray. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Milton, Anthony. Review of John Bunyan and His England, 1628–1688, ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 43:4 (October 1992): 690–691.

Mingiuc, Andreea. “Mary Rowlandson’s Captivity Narrative: A Bunyanesque Journey towards Redemption.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 114–127.

Montgomery, Linda Marion. “Mistress Mary Bunyan: First Wife of John Bunyan.” Priscilla Papers 7 (Winter 1993): 12–13.

Morden, Peter J. “John Bunyan: A Seventeenth-Century Evangelical?” In Grounded in Grace: Essays to Honour Ian M. Randall. Ed. Pieter J. Lalleman, Peter J. Morden, and Anthony R. Cross, 33–52. London: Spurgeon’s College/Didcot: Baptist Historical Society, 2013.

Morden, Peter J. John Bunyan: The People’s Pilgrim. Farnham, Surrey: CWR, 2013.

Morden, Peter, and Ruth Broomhall. To Be a Pilgrim: 40 Days with The Pilgrim’s Progress. Farnham: CWR, 2016.

Morris, Colin, and Peter Roberts, eds. Pilgrimage: The English Experience from Becket to Bunyan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.

Morris, Laurence G. S. The Pilgrim’s Progress: Specially Rewritten for Children. Port Washington, PA: Christian Literature Crusade, reprint 1993.

Morrison, Barbara S. “Body Rhetoric: Women en Route to Salvation in Oguri and Pilgrim’s Progress.” Ph.D. diss., University of North Dakota, 2006.

Moser, Christian. “Die Schrift als Halluzinogen: John Bunyan, der Buchdruck und die Konstitution des protestantischen Selbst.” In Automedialität: Subjektkonstitution in Schrift, Bild und neuen Medien. Ed. Jörg Dünne and Christian Moser, 53–76. München: Wilhelm Fink, 2008.

Moss, Joyce, and Lorraine Valestuk. British and Irish Literature and Its Times: Celtic Migrations to the Reform Bill (Beginnings–1830s). Detroit: Gale Group, 2001.

Muether, John R. “Why Evangelicals Don’t Read Pilgrim’s Progress (and Why They Should).” RTS Reformed Quarterly (Fall 2003): 6–7, 11.

Mulder, John M. “Pilgrim’s Progress: You Can’t Make it Alone.” Perspectives: A Journal of Reformed Thought 25:5 (May 2010): 5–9.

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Runyon, Daniel V. “The Holy War: Sanctification as Spiritual Warfare.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 105–117.

Runyon, Daniel V. John Bunyan’s Master Story: The Holy War as Battle Allegory in Religious and Biblical Context. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2007.

Runyon, Daniel V. Review of “Bunyan and the Practice of Intensive Reading in the Seventeenth Century,” by W. R. Owens, Plenary Address for the Fifth Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire. The Recorder 14 (2008): 7.

Runyon, Daniel V. “Course on Bunyan at Spring Arbor University.” The Recorder 15 (Spring 2009): 10.

Runyon, Daniel V. “Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners.” In Masterplots, Fourth Edition. Ed. Laurence W. Mazzeno, 2343–2346. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 2010.

Runyon, Daniel V. Review of The Human Satan in Seventeenth-Century English Literature: From Milton to Rochester, by Nancy Rosenfeld. The Recorder 16 (Spring 2010): 5–7.

Runyon, Daniel V. “Luther’s Influence on Bunyan’s Use of Allegory.” Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 76–84.

Runyon, Daniel V. Review of William Baspoole: The Pilgrime, ed. Kathryn Walls. The Recorder 17 (Spring 2011): 7–8.

Runyon, Daniel V. Review of Histories that Mansoul and her Wars Anatomize: The Drama of Redemption in John Bunyan’s Holy War, by Robert J. McKelvey. Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 138–141.

Runyon, Daniel V. Review of The Very Heart of Prayer: Reclaiming John Bunyan’s Spirituality, by Brian G. Najapfour. The Recorder 19 (Spring 2013): 12–14.

Runyon, Daniel V. “Teaching Bunyan to American Undergraduates.” The Recorder 19 (Spring 2013): 24–26.

Rupp, Susanne. “From Grace to Glory”: Himmelsvorstellungen in der englischen Theologie und Literatur des 17. Jahrhunderts. Heidelberg: C. Winter, 2001. Especially Chapter 7, “John Bunyan: ‘Now I could see myself in heaven and earth at once,’” 253–305.

Rutherford, Suzanne. “The Progress of Pilgrim’s Progress: The Musical.” The Recorder 6 (2000): 16–18.

Rutherford, Suzanne. “Another Year’s Journey with Pilgrim’s Progress: The Musical.” The Recorder 7 (2001): 13–14.

Ryan, Scott C. “Journeying in Hope: Paul’s Letter to the Romans and John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Holy War in Conversation.” American Baptist Quarterly 33:3–4 (Fall and Winter 2014): 298–318.

Ryken, Leland. Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress (Christian Guides to the Classics series). Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2014.

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St. Giles Celebrates 900 Years: A Service of Thanksgiving for John Bunyan, John Milton, and John Trundle, Sunday 5th November 1989. London: St. Giles Cripplegate, 1989.

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Sandwith, Corinne. Review of The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Isabel Hofmeyr. Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa 58 (2005): 106–108.

Sato, Hikari. “The Devil’s Progress: Blake, Bunyan, and The Marriage of Heaven and Hell.” Studies in English Literature 41:2 (December 2001): 121–146.

Sato, Mamoru. “The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Water of Life” [in Japanese]. Annals of the Japanese Association for the Study of Puritanism 5 (2011): 25–36.

Schellenberg, Betty A. “Sociability and the Sequel: Rewriting Hero and Journey in The Pilgrim’s Progress, Part II.” Studies in the Novel 23:3 (Fall 1991): 312–324.

Schleiner, Louise. “Gendered Journeys in The Faerie Queene and Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Women and the Journey: The Female Travel Experience. Ed. Bonnie Frederick and Susan H. McLeod, 145–169. Pullman: Washington State University Press, 1993.

Schmidt, Gary D. Review of Christian’s Children: The Influence of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress on American Children’s Literature, by Ruth K. MacDonald. Christianity and Literature 39:4 (Summer 1990): 452–454.

Schmidt, Gary D. John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress: A Retelling. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1994.

Schmidt, Michael. The Novel: A Biography. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2014. Chapter 4: “Beyond Irony: John Bunyan,” 54–62.

Schmidt, Richard H. God Seekers: Twenty Centuries of Christian Spiritualities. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2008.

Schutte, G. J. Bunyan in Nederland: Opstellen over de waardering van John Bunyan in Nederland. Houten: Den Hertog, 1989.

Schwanda, Tom. Review of The Hidden Smile of God: The Fruit of Affliction in the Lives of John Bunyan, William Cowper, and David Brainerd, by John Piper. Calvin Theological Journal 36:2 (November 2001): 411–412.

Schwanda, Tom. “John Bunyan.” In Dictionary of Christian Spirituality. Ed. Glen G. Scorgie, 322–332. Grand Rapids:  Zondervan, 2011.

Seager, Nicholas. “John Bunyan and Socinianism.” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 65:3 (July 2014): 580–600.

Searle, Alison. “The Eyes of Your Heart”: Literary and Theological Trajectories of Imagining Biblically. Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2008. Especially Chapter 3: “A Creative Imagination? John Bunyan and the Pilgrim’s Unexpected Progress,” 59–79.

Searle, Alison. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera J. Camden. Journal of Religious History 35:2 (June 2011): 299–300.

Searle, Alison. Review of Protestant Autobiography in the Seventeenth-Century Anglophone World, by Kathleen Lynch. Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 141–144.

Seaver, Paul S. Review of John Bunyan and English Nonconformity, by Richard L. Greaves. Church History 63:2 (June 1994): 290–291.

Seddon, Eric. “Turn up my Metaphors and do not Fail: Religious Meaning and Musical Iconography in Ralph Vaughan Williams’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Journal of the RVW Society 38 (March 2007): 4–13.

“Seen through his Writings.” Review of John Bunyan in Context by Michael A. Mullett. Expository Times 108:2 (November 1996): 64.

Seidel, Kevin Sterling. “Leisure to Repent: Essays on the Bible at the Origins of the English Novel.” Ph.D. diss., University of Virginia, 2007.

Seidel, Kevin. “Pilgrim’s Progress and the Book.” ELH: English Literary History 77:2 (Summer 2010): 509–533.

Sharrock, Roger. “Temptation and Understanding in Grace Abounding.” Bunyan Studies 1:1 (Autumn 1988): 5–14.

Sharrock, Roger. “‘When at the first I took my Pen in Hand’: Bunyan and the Book.” In John Bunyan: Conventicle and Parnassus. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 71–90. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.

Sharrock, Roger. “Bunyan Studies Today: An Evaluation.” In Bunyan in England and Abroad. Ed. M. van Os and G. J. Schutte, 30–44. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1990.

Sharrock, Roger. “Spiritual Autobiography: Bunyan’s Grace Abounding.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 97–104. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Sills, Adam. “Mr. Bunyan’s Neighborhood and the Geography of Dissent.” English Literary History 70 (2003): 67–87.

Sim, Stuart. Review of The Literary Culture of Nonconformity in Later Seventeenth-Century England, by N. H. Keeble. Bunyan Studies 1:1 (Autumn 1988): 75–76.

Sim, Stuart. “Isolating the Reprobate: Paradox as a Strategy for Social Critique in The Life and Death of Mr. Badman.” Bunyan Studies 1:2 (Spring 1989): 30–41.

Sim, Stuart. Negotiations with Paradox: Narrative Practice and Narrative Form in Bunyan and Defoe. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1990.

Sim, Stuart. “‘Safe for Those for Whom it is to be Safe’: Salvation and Damnation in Bunyan’s Fiction.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 149–160. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Sim, Stuart. “Bunyan, Lyotard, and the Conflict of Narratives.” Bunyan Studies 8 (1998): 67–81.

Sim, Stuart. “‘Transworld Depravity’ and ‘Invariant Assertions’: John Bunyan’s Possible Worlds.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 245–262. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

Sim, Stuart. “‘The Wilderness of this World’: Bunyan and the State of Nature.” Bunyan Studies 12 (2006/2007): 22–35.

Sim, Stuart. “Bunyan and his Fundamentalist Readers.” In Reception, Appropriation, Recollection: Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. Ed. W. R. Owens and Stuart Sim, 213–228. Bern: Peter Lang, 2007.

Sim, Stuart. “Bunyan and the Early Novel: The Life and Death of Mr. Badman.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 95–106. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Sim, Stuart. “Two Narratives of Religious Despair: The Secular versus the Postsecular in The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner.” Anglistik und Englischunterricht 74 (2010): 43–53.

Sim, Stuart. “Despair, Melancholy, and the Novel.” In Melancholy Experience in Literature of the Long Eighteenth Century: Before Depression, 1660–1800, by Allan Ingram, Stuart Sim, Clark Lawlor, Richard Terry, John Baker, and Leigh Wetherall Dickson, 114–141. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

Sim, Stuart, and David Walker. Bunyan and Authority: The Rhetoric of Dissent and the Legitimation Crisis in Seventeenth-Century England. Bern; New York: Peter Lang, 2000.

Simonova, Natasha. “Passing Through Vanity Fair: The Pilgrim’s Progress in the Marketplace.” Authorship 2:1 (2012). Electronic publication, accessible at <http://www.authorship.ugent.be/article/view/761>.

Simonova, Natasha. Early Modern Authorship and Prose Continuations: Adaptation and Ownership from Sidney to Richardson. Basingstoke/New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. Especially Chapter 4, “Rogues and Pilgrims: Two Restoration Bestsellers,” 89–123.

Simpson, Ken. “‘For the Best Improvement of Time’: Pilgrim’s Progress and the Liturgies of Nonconformity.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 97–112. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

Simpson, Ken. “Pilgrim’s Progress Murals in St. Elisabeth’s Church, Eastbourne.” The Recorder 12 (2006): 5–6.

Simpson, Ken, ed. “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 13 (New York: AMS Press, 2006): 167–311.

Simpson, Ken. “Special Feature Introduction.” In “Reading Bunyan’s Readers: New Essays on the Reception of The Pilgrim’s Progress. A Special Feature,” in 1650–1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 13. Ed. Ken Simpson, 167–174. New York: AMS Press, 2006.

Simpson, Ken. Review of “Puritans and Freethinkers in the Decade of The Pilgrim’s Progress,” by Nigel Smith, Plenary Address for the Fifth Triennial Conference of the International John Bunyan Society, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire. The Recorder 14 (2008): 5.

Simpson, Ken. “Toward a New Monumentality: Hans Feibusch’s Pilgrim’s Progress Murals.” Bunyan Studies 13 (2008/2009): 82–106.

Simpson, Ken, ed. Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from the Recorder, 1999–2008. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

Simpson, Ken. “Foreword.” In Texting Bunyan: Essays on Attribution, Influence, and Appropriation from the Recorder, 1999–2008. Ed. Ken Simpson, vii–x. Cuyahoga Falls, OH: Open Latch Publications, 2010.

Simpson, Ken. “Margaret Atwood Adapts John Bunyan.” The Recorder 16 (Spring 2010): 9–10.

Simpson, Ken. Review of Grace Overwhelming: John Bunyan, The Pilgrim’s Progress, and the Extremes of the Baptist Mind, by Anne Dunan-Page. Bunyan Studies 14 (2010): 131–135.

Slaby, Frédéric. “La Bible et l’inspiration littéraire dans les Suspiria de Profundis de T. De Quincey.” [“The Bible and Literary Inspiration in T. De Quincey’s Suspiria de Profundis.”] Revue LISA/LISA e-journal 5:4 (2007): 133–153. Electronic publication, accessible online at <http://lisa.revues.org/1385>.

Slights, William W. E. “Bunyan on the Edge.” Bunyan Studies 10 (2001/2002): 29–45.

Slights, William W. E. Review of Trauma and Transformation: The Political Progress of John Bunyan, ed. Vera Camden. Seventeenth-Century News 66:3–4 (Fall–Winter 2008): 167–170.

Smart, Alison. “A New Musical Adaptation of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Bunyan Studies 18 (2014): 140–142.

Smith, Herbert W. “Bunyan and Dante: Puritan Mechanick Preacher and Medieval Scholar-Poet: A Comparative Study of the Men and Their Masterpieces.” Durham University Journal 53:2 (July 1992): 215–227.

Smith, Jane Stuart, and Betty Carlson. Great Christian Hymn Writers. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1997.

Smith, Nigel. “Bunyan and the Language of the Body in Seventeenth-Century England.” In John Bunyan and his England, 1628–88. Ed. Anne Laurence, W. R. Owens, and Stuart Sim, 161–174. London: Hambledon Press, 1990.

Smith, Nigel. Review of Johannes Boekholt (1656–1693): The First Dutch Publisher of John Bunyan and Other English Authors, by J. B. Alblas. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 41:1 (January 1990): 121–122.

Smith, Nigel. “John Bunyan and Restoration Literature.” In The Cambridge Companion to Bunyan. Ed. Anne Dunan-Page, 26–38. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

Sneep, John, and Arlette Zinck. “Spiritual and Psychic Transformation: Understanding the Psychological Dimensions of John Bunyan’s Mental Illness and Healing.” Journal of Psychology & Christianity 24:2 (Summer 2005): 156–164.

Snyman, Salome. Review of The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of The Pilgrim’s Progress, by Isabel Hofmeyr. English in Africa 31:2 (October 2004): 173–175.

Sobczak, A. J. “The Life and Death of Mr. Badman.” In Cyclopedia of Literary Characters, 3rd edition. Ed. Frank Northen Magill, 1082. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 1998.

Sobczak, A. J. “The Pilgrim’s Progress.” In Cyclopedia of Literary Characters, 3rd edition. Ed. Frank Northen Magill, 1510. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 1998.

Sondergard, Sid. “‘This Giant Has Wounded Me as Well as Thee’: Reading Bunyan’s Violence and/as Authority.” In The Witness of Times: Manifestations of Ideology in Seventeenth Century England. Ed. Katherine Z. Keller and Gerald J. Schiffhorst, 218–237. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1993.

Song, Jung-Gyung. “Competing Authorities: A Typographic Study of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.” Saehan English Language and Literature 57:2 (May 2015): 51–67.

Soubrenie, Elisabeth. “Chance, Providence, and Fate: The Spiritual Adventures of John Bunyan and William Cowper.” In Adventure: An Eighteenth-Century Idiom: Essays on the Daring and the Bold as a Pre-Modern Medium. Ed. Serge Soupel, Kevin L. Cope, and Alexander Pettit, with Laura Thomason Wood, 23–39. New York: AMS, 2009.

Southey, Robert, and Edward Dowden. Oliver Cromwell and John Bunyan. Reprint, East Sussex: Gardners Books, 2007.

Spargo, Tamsin. “The Purloined Postcard: Waiting for Bunyan.” Textual Practice 8 (1994): 79–96.

Spargo, Tamsin. “Contra-Dictions: Women as Figures of Exclusion and Resistance in John Bunyan and Agnes Beaumont’s Narratives.” In Voicing Women: Gender and Sexuality in Early Modern Writing. Ed. Kate Chedgzoy, Melanie Hansen, and Suzanne Trill, 173–184. Keele: Keele University Press, 1996.

Spargo, Tamsin. The Writing of John Bunyan. Aldershot: Ashgate, 1997.

Spargo, Tamsin. “The Fathers’ Seductions: Improper Relations of Desire in Seventeenth-Century Nonconformist Communities.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature 17:2 (Autumn 1998): 255–268.

Spargo, Tamsin. “‘I being taken from you in presence: Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners and Claims to Authority.” In Literature Criticism from 1400 to 1800, Volume 70. Ed. Lawrence J. Trudeau. Detroit, MI: Gale, 2001.

Spargo, Tamsin. “Bunyans Abounding, or the Names of the Author.” In John Bunyan: Reading Dissenting Writing. Ed. N. H. Keeble, 79–102. Bern: Peter Lang, 2002.

Spargo, Tamsin. “Have you never a Hill Mizar to Remember? Some thoughts on Agnosticism and Meaning.” The International Journal of Religion and Spirituality in Society 1:1 (2011): 15–24.

Spargo, Tamsin. “A Writer’s Progress: The John Bunyan Volume for the British Council’s Writers and their Work Series.” The Recorder 20 (Spring 2014): 36–38.

Spargo, Tamsin. John Bunyan (Writers and their Work series). Tavistock: Northcote House, 2016.

Spengler, Birgit. Literary Spinoffs: Rewriting the Classics – Re-Imagining the Community. Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag, 2015. Especially Chapter 5, “From Playing Pilgrim to Waging War: March,” 229–303.

Sproxton, Judith. “D’Aubigné and Bunyan: The Experience of Sin.” Journal of European Studies 18:3 (September 1988): 155–165.

Spurgeon, Charles H. Pictures from Pilgrim’s Progress: A Commentary on Portions of John Bunyan’s Immortal Allegory. Pasadena, TX: Pilgrim Publications, reprint 1992.

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Stachniewski, John. The Persecutory Imagination: English Puritanism and the Literature of Religious Despair. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991.

Stähler, Axel. “The Re-conceptualization of Space in Edwardian Prophecy Fiction: Heterotopia, Utopia, and the Apocalypse.” In Utopian Spaces of Modernism: British Literature and Culture, 1885–1945. Ed. Rosalyn Gregory and Benjamin Kohlmann, 159–176. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.

Stanwood, P. G. Review of Storytelling in the Works of Bunyan, Grimmelshausen, Defoe, and Schnabel, by Janet Bertsch. The Recorder 13 (2007): 10–11.

Stauffer, Richard. “‘Le Voyage du Pélerin,’ de John Bunyan.” Bulletin de la Societé de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 134 (October–December 1988): 709–722.

Steen, Abram. “‘Painful passages’: Death, Ritual, and Literature in Post-Reformation England.” Ph.D. diss., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2007.

Steen, Abram. “‘Over this Jordan’: Dying and the Nonconformist Community in Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.” Modern Philology 110:1 (August 2012): 49–73.

Stephenson, Barry. “The John Bunyan Collections at Bedford Central Library.” The Recorder 13 (2007): 5–6.

Stevens, Paul. “Bunyan, the Great War, and the Political Ways of Grace.” Review of English Studies 59:242 (November 2008): 701–721.

Stewart, Ralph. “Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress, ‘The Author’s Apology for His Book.’” Explicator 52:4 (Summer 1994): 211–13.

Still, Todd D., and W. Dennis Tucker Jr., eds. Image and Word: Reflections on the Stained Glass in the Paul W. Powell Chapel. Waco, Texas: Baylor University Press, 2009.

Stoker, David. “William Proctor, Nathaniel Ponder, and the Financing of The Pilgrim’s Progress.” The Library 4:1 (March 2003): 64–69.

Stranahan, Brainerd P. “Bunyan’s Satire and its Biblical Sources.” In Bunyan in Our Time. Ed. Robert G. Collmer, 35–60. Kent, OH: The Kent State University Press, 1989.

Stussy, Susan A. Review of A Tinker and a Poor Man: John Bunyan and His Church, 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill. Library Journal 114:1 (1 January 1989): 89.

Sutherland, James R. Restoration Literature, 1660–1700: Dryden, Bunyan, and Pepys. Oxford: Clarendon Press, reprint 1990.

Sutherland, John. The Lives of the Novelists: A History of Fiction in 294 Lives. Chapter 1: “John Bunyan”, 1–3. London: Profile, 2011, repr. New Haven: Yale UP, 2012.

Sutton-Jones, Andrew. Review of John Bunyan and the Language of Conviction, by Beth Lynch. Literature and Theology 19:3 (September 2005): 280–282.

Swaim, Kathleen M. “Christian’s ‘Christian Behavior’ to his Family in Pilgrim’s Progress.” Religion and Literature 21 (1989): 1–15.

Swaim, Kathleen M. “Mercy and the Feminine Heroic in the Second Part of Pilgrim’s Progress.Studies in English Literature 30:3 (Summer 1990): 387–409.

Swaim, Kathleen M. Review of A Tinker and A Poor Man: John Bunyan and His Church, 1628–1688, by Christopher Hill. ANQ 4:3 (July 1991): 160–163.

Swaim, Kathleen M. Pilgrim’s Progress, Puritan Progress: Discourses and Contexts. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1993.

Swann, Charles. “Clym Ancient and Modern: Oedipus, Bunyan and the Return of the Native.” Victorian Newsletter 90 (Fall 1996): 15–18.

Swann, Charles. “Mark Rutherford’s Ambiguous Deliverance: Bunyan, Defoe, Spinoza, and Secular History.” Review of English Studies 49:193 (February 1998): 23–39.

Sweetman, Daniel J. “Samuel Taylor Coleridge and John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress: Symbol and Allegory as Literary Representations of Redemption.” Ph.D. diss., Drew University, 2012.

Sys, Jacques. “Le Verbe et le regard: The Pilgrim’s Progress et la dramatique chrétienne.” Bulletin de la Société d’Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles 35 (November 1992): 69–89.

Szigeti, Jeno. “Eighteenth-Century Hungarian Protestant Pietist Literature and John Bunyan.” In Bunyan in England and Abroad. Ed. M. van Os and G. J. Schutte, 133–143. Amsterdam: VU University Press, 1990.

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 Talbot, Brian. “The King James Bible and Baptists over 400 years.” American Baptist Quarterly 30:1–2 (Spring–Summer 2011): 108–133.

Talon, Henri. John Bunyan: The Man and His Work. Temecula, CA: Reprint Services, reprint 1999.

Tambling, Jeremy. “Bunyan and Things: A Book for Boys and Girls.” Bunyan Studies 16 (2012): 7–31.

Tarr, Leslie K. “Story of John Bunyan: Progress of a Pilgrim.” Decision 29 (September 1988): 13–14.

Taylor, Iain. “Bunyan, Bible Commentaries, and the Unpardonable Sin.” Bunyan Studies 15 (2011): 90–111.

Terry, Richard. “‘Metempsychosis:’ A Metaphor for Literary Tradition in Dryden and his Contemporaries.” Bunyan Studies 6 (1995/1996): 56–69.

Thickstun, Margaret Olofson. Fictions of the Feminine: Puritan Doctrine and the Representation of Women. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1988.

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Thomas, Ronald R. “The Novel and the Afterlife: The End of the Line in Bunyan and Beckett.” Modern Philology 86 (1988–1989): 385–397.

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Tiffany, Grace. Love’s Pilgrimage: The Holy Journey in English Renaissance Literature. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2006. Especially Chapter 7, “Coda: The Pilgrim’s Progress in English Renaissance Literature,” 162–171.

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Titlestad, Peter J. H. “Bunyan’s Calvinist Orthodoxy: A Reply to Greaves and Johnson.” The Recorder 7 (2001): 4.

Titlestad, P. J. H. “From Beza to Bunyan: The Pilgrim Road Mapped?” Bunyan Studies 13 (2008/2009): 64–81.

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Tredennick, Linda. “Exteriority in Milton and Puritan Life Writing.” SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 51:1 (Winter 2011): 159–179.

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Trim, Mary. “A Changing Hero: The Relevance of Bunyan’s Pilgrim and The Pilgrim’s Progress through Three Centuries of Children’s Literature.” Ph.D. diss., Loughborough University, 1998.

Trim, Mary. “Bunyan’s Burial Place.” The Recorder 6 (2000): 2–3.

Trimpi, Helen Pinkerton. Review of In Defence of Adam: Essays on Bunyan, Milton and Others by C. Q. Drummond, ed. John Baxter and Gordon Harvey. The Recorder 14 (2008): 14–15.

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Underwood, T. L. “‘It pleased me Much to Contend’: John Bunyan as Controversialist.” Church History 57:4 (December 1988): 456–469.

Underwood, T. L., ed. “John Bunyan: A Tercentenary.” American Baptist Quarterly 7:4 (December 1988): 437–508.

Underwood, T. L. Review of Bunyan in Our Time, ed. Robert G. Collmer. Church History 63:1 (March 1994): 117–118.

Underwood, T. L. Primitivism, Radicalism, and the Lamb’s War: The Baptist-Quaker Conflict in Seventeenth-Century England. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Underwood, T. L. “‘For then I should be a Ranter or a Quaker’: John Bunyan and Radical Religion.” In Awakening Words: John Bunyan and the Language of Community. Ed. David Gay, James G. Randall, and Arlette Zinck, 127–140. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2000.

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