[Crews, Harry. 1983. Harry Crews: An interview. By David Jeffrey and Donald Noble. In David Jeffrey (ed.), A Grit’s triumph: Essays on the works of Harry Crews, 140-151. Port Washington, NY: Associated Faculty Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Crews, Harry. 1984. The violence that finds us. Playboy 31(4). 98-99, 186, 188, 190-192.]Search in Google Scholar
[Crews, Harry. 1993 [1979]. Climbing the tower. Classic Crews: A Harry Crews reader, 437-444. New York: Touchstone.]Search in Google Scholar
[Crews, Harry. 1998 [1976]. A feast of snakes. New York: Scribner.]Search in Google Scholar
[Crews, Harry. 2001. An interview with Harry Crews. By Erik Bledsoe. In Eric Bledsoe (ed.), Perspectives on Harry Crews, 147-173. Jackson: University of Mississippi Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Beatty, Patricia. 1983. Crews’s women. In David Jeffrey (ed.), A Grit’s triumph: Essays on the works of Harry Crews, 112-123. Port Washington, NY: Associated Faculty Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Buehrer, David. 1996. Crews’ blues: Manic-depression in A feast of snakes. Journal of Evolutionary Psychology 17(1-2). 37-43.]Search in Google Scholar
[Civello, Paul. 1994. American literary naturalism and its twentieth-century transformations: Frank Norris, Ernest Hemingway, Don DeLillo. Athens: University of Georgia Press. ]Search in Google Scholar
[Edwards, Tim. 1998. ‘Everthing is eating everthing else’: The naturalistic impulse in Harry Crews’s A feast of snakes. The Southern Quarterly 37(1). 42-53.]Search in Google Scholar
[Fiedler, Leslie. 1997 [1960]. Love and death in the American novel. Champaign, IL: Dalkey.]Search in Google Scholar
[Freud, Sigmund. 2001 [1922, 1955]. Medusa’s head. Trans. James Strachey. In James Strachey (ed.), Beyond the pleasure principle, Group psychology, and other works (The standard edition of the Complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud XVIII), 273-274. London: Vintage.]Search in Google Scholar
[Jeffrey, David. 1986. Murder and mayhem in Crews’s A feast of snakes. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction 28(1). 45-53.10.1080/00111619.1986.9937830]Search in Google Scholar
[Lake, Elise. 2001. Having a hard time of it: Women in the novels of Harry Crews. In Erik Bledsoe (ed.), Perspectives on Harry Crews 79-93. Jackson: University of Mississippi Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Lynskey, Edward. 1987. Violence in hometown America: Harry Crews’s A feast of snakes. Pembroke Magazine 19. 195-200.]Search in Google Scholar
[McGregory, Jerrilyn. 1998. Harry Crews’s home place: An excursion into Wiregrass Country and the carnivalesque. The Southern Quarterly 37(1). 66-73.]Search in Google Scholar
[Romine, Scott. 1998. Harry Crews’s away games: Home and sport in A feast of snakes and Body. The Southern Quarterly 37(1). 74-87.]Search in Google Scholar
[Seelye, John. 1980. Georgia boys: The redclay satyrs of Erskine Caldwell and Harry Crews. Virginia Quarterly Review 56(4). 612-626.]Search in Google Scholar
[Spikes, Michael. 1993-1995. Victory over sin: Harry Crews’s critique of the phallic ethic in A feast of snakes. University of Mississippi Studies in English 11-12. 411-423.]Search in Google Scholar
[West, Nathanael. 1997 [1932]. Some notes on violence. In Sacvan Bercovitch (ed.), Novels and other writings, 399-400. New York: Library of America. ]Search in Google Scholar