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GUIDE
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SANTA
BARBARA
AUTHORS
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PUBLISHERS
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H
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Z
H
Haber, Eric. Santa Barbara
resident and poet, published in Santa Barbara Review.
Hagedorn, Herman (1882-1964). Author of books
on Theodore Roosevelt, poetry, and an autobiography; also wrote for Moral
Rearmament. Works include: The Woman of Corinth (1908), A Troop
of the Guard (1909), Faces in the Dawn (1914), The Great
Maze, and, The Heart of Youth (1917) [Spec PS3515.A23 G7 1917], You
Are the Hope of the World! (1917), Roosevelt in the Bad Lands
(1921) [Spec, Wyles E757.H28], The Rough Riders (1927) [Spec PS3515.A23
R64], The Book of Courage (1929), Leonard Wood (1931) [Spec,
Wyles E181.W6 H3], This Darkness and This Light (1938) [Spec PN6110.C7
H14], Combat at Midnight (1940) [Spec PS3515.A155 C6], The Bomb
That Fell on America (SB: Pacific Coast, 1946), Prophet in the
Wilderness (1947) [Spec CT1098.S45 H3], The Roosevelt Family of
Sagamore Hill (1954) [Main E757.3.H3], The Hyphenated Family: An
American Saga (1960) [Main PS3515.A155 Z52 and Spec PS3515.A23 Z52],
and While There is Time… (1961) [Spec, Printers Z478.86.P32 H338
1961]. See also: SB News-Press, Mar. 15, 1964, A16.
Hale, Bruce. Santa Barbara resident and author
of children’s books. Works include: The Legend of the Laughing Gecko
(1994), Surf Gecko to the Rescue (1994), Moki and the Magic
Surfboard (1996), The Adventures of Space Gecko (1997), Moki
the Gecko’s Best Christmas Ever (1998), How the Gecko Lost His
Tail (1999), The Chameleon Wore Chartreuse: A Chet Gecko Mystery
(2000), The Mystery of Mr. Nice (2000), Farewell, My Lunchbag
(2001), The Big Nap (2001), The Hamster of the Baskervilles
(2002), This Gum for Hire (2002), The Malted Falcon (2003),
and Trouble is My Beeswax (2003).
Hall, James Norman (1887-1951). Some of Hall’s
greatest works were done with author Charles B. Nordhoff and they include:
Mutiny on the Bounty (1932) [Main PS3525.O82 M8 1932] and Pitcairn’s
Island (1934) [Main PS3527.O82 P5]. Other works include: Kitchener’s
Mob: The Adventures of an American in the British Army (1916) [Spec
D640.H3 1916], The Tale of a Shipwreck (1934) [Spec DU800.H3],
The Friends (1939) [Spec PS3515.A363 F3 1939 and Spec, Printers
Z239.P57 H34]. See also: Gilbar, Literary, 235-236
Hall, Thorne (1920-1997). Author
of Odyssey of the Santa Barbara Kingdoms and 138 Miles North (1960)
[Main F868.S23 O3, Spec F868.S23 O3 1960, and Spec, Printers Z478.86.P29
H356 1963], Odyssey of the Incredible Kingdoms (1960) [Spec F868.M7
H34 1960 and Spec, Printers Z478.86.P29 H355 1963], and Odyssey
of the California Islands (1962) [Spec, Printers Z478.86.P29 H354
1962].
Hall-Wood, Mary Camilla Foster. Santa Barbara
resident, used the pen name Camilla K. von K. Author of Santa Barbara
As It Is: Topology, Climate, Resources, and Objects of Interest [Main
F869.S45 W8, Spec F869.S45 H244 1884, and Spec, Printers Z478.86.I53 H338
1884] and Sea-Leaves (Santa Barbara, 1887) [Printers Z487.86.I53
H34 1887]. Briefly served as editor for the Santa Barbara Index,
which had been started by her husband, Dr. Edward N. Wood, and later was
editor of the Santa Barbara Press.
Halliday, Brett. See Dresser, Davis.
Hammond, Phillip E. (1931- ). UCSB Professor
of Religious Studies and author of several works on 20th century American
religion, including The Role of Ideology in Church Participation
(1980) [Main BR517.H35 1980] and The Dynamics of Religious Organizations:
The Extravasation of the Sacred (2000) [Main BL2525.H36 2000].
Hanson, Mary Elizabeth. UCSB Library staff
member and author of children’s books such as Snug (1998) [Curric.
Lab PZ7.H1988 Sn 1998], The Old Man and the Flea (2001) [Curric.
Lab PZ7.H1988 Ol 2001], and The Difference Between Babies and Cookies
(2002) [Curric. Lab PZ7.H1988 Di 2002].
*Hardin, Garrett (1915- ). UCSB Professor Emeritus
of Biological Sciences and author of several popular books on population,
birth control, and related topics, including: Nature and Man’s Fate
(1959) [SEL QH366.H35, Spec QH361.H25 1961, and Spec, Darwin QH361.H25
1960], Birth Control (1970) [Main and Spec HQ766.H35], Stalking
the Wild Taboo (1973), Mandatory Motherhood: The True Meaning of
“Right to Life” (1974) [Main and Spec HQ767.5.U5 H36 1974], The
Limits of Altruism (1977), Promethean Ethics (1980), Filters
Against Folly: How to Survive Despite Economists, Ecologists, and the
Merely Eloquent (1985), Living Within Limits: Ecology, Economics,
and Population Taboos (1993), and The Ostrich Factor: Our Population
Myopia (1999) [Main HB849.415.H37 1999]. UCSB University Archives
has his papers (UArch FacP 14). See also: Gilbar, Literary, 104.
Harper, Claudia (1933- ). Santa Barbara resident
and author of Anabel: A History (SB: Fithian, 1998) [Spec CT275.H3852
H37 1998].
Harrington, John Peabody (1884-1961). Ethnographer
who wrote about the Chumash. Works include: Tomol: Chumash Watercraft
as Described in the Ethnograhic Notes of John P. Harrington (1978)
[Native American Studies E99.C815 H37], See also: Thomas C. Blackburn,
ed., December’s Child: A Book of Chumash Oral Narratives Collected
by John Peabody Harrington (1975) [Main and Spec E99.C815 D42], Gilbar,
Literary, 1-3; Gilbar, Tales, 1.
Harris, Mark (1922- ). Goleta
resident and author. Works include: Trumpet to the World (1946)
[Main PS3515.A757 T78 1989], City of Discontent (1952), The
Southpaw (1953) [Spec PS3515.A757 S6 1962], Bang the Drum Slowly
(1956) [Spec PS3515.A757 B3 1960], Something About a Soldier (1957)
[Main PS3515.A312 S6 and Spec PS3515.A757 S65], A Ticket for a Seamstitch
(1957) [Spec PS3515.A757 T5 1957], Wake Up, Stupid (1959) [Main
PS3515.A312 W3], Friedman & Son (1963) [Main PS3515.A312 F7],
Mark the Glove Boy (1964) [Main E748.N5 H3], Twentyone Twice
(1966), The Goy (1970) [Main PS3515.A312 G6], Best Father Ever
Invented (1976) [Main PS3515.A727 Z52], It Looked Like For Ever
(1979) [Main PS3515.A757 I84], Short Work of It (1979) [Main AC8.H36676],
Saul Bellow, Drumlin Woodchuck (1980) [Main PS3503.E4488 Z675],
The Heart of Boswell (1981), Lying in Bed (1984) [Main PS3515.A757
L9 1984], Speed (1990) [Main PS3515.A757 S68 1990], The Tale
Maker (1994) [Main PS3515.A757 T35 1994], and The Self-Made Brain
Surgeon (1999) [Main PS3515.A757 S35 1999].
Hauser, Hillary (1944- ).
Summerland resident, oceanographer, poet, and writer. Frequent contributor
to Santa Barbara Magazine. Author of Scuba Diving (1976),
The Living World of the Reef (1978) [SEL QH95.8.H38 1978], Diamonds,
and Other Poems (SB: Otto Press, 1984), Call to Adventure (1987),
and The Adventurous Aquanaut (1990).
Hawley, Walter Augustus (1863-1920).
Santa Barbara resident and author of Early Days of Santa Barbara, California,
From the First Discoveries by Europeans to December 1846 (1910) [Main
and Spec, Wyles F869.S23 H3] and (SB: Schauer Printing Studio, 1920) [Spec
F869.S45 H32 1920].
Hayes, Will (1925- ). Teacher and author
of works such as The Biggest Pine Tree (1957), The Biggest Pig
(1958), About the Biggest Salmon (1961), Good Times on Boats
(1963), and The Complete Ballooning Book (1977). See also:
SB News-Press, Mar. 15, 1964, A17.
Hayne, Francis Bourn. Author of En Un Tiempo
- Early Days of the Society of Los Alamos (1979) [Spec F868.S23 E5].
Hazard, Caroline (1856-1945). Poet who wintered
in Santa Barbara for most of her life. Special has several first editions.
Works include: Garden Song (1921) [Spec PS3515.A973 G37 1921],
Anchors of Tradition (1924) [Spec, Printers Z239.Y3 H39], A
Transplanted Puritan (1927) [Spec PS3515.A973 T73 1927 and Spec, Printers
Z239.H24 H385 1927], Songs in the Sun (1927) [Spec PS3515.A973
S6 1927], A Precious Heritage (1929) [Spec CT275.H4853 H3], Threads
from the Distaff of History and Contemplation (1934) [Spec PS3515.A973
T5 1934], and Golden State: A Semi Centennial Collection of California
Verse Written from 1889 to 1939 (1939) [Main PS3515.A973 G6 1939 and
Printers Z478.86.S33 H39 1939]. See also: Gilbar, Literary, 38,
176, 202-203.
Head, Peter. Artist. Works include: Glimpses
of the City of Santa Barbara, California (1968) [Spec F869.S45 H375
1968].
Heebner, Mary (1951- ). Santa Barbara
resident, book artist, and author, whose works include: Old Marks,
New Marks (Carpinteria: Joseph Campbell & Marija Gimbutas Library,
1996) [Arts AEC-84917 and Spec Printers Z239.J686 H44 1996], Island:
Journal from Iceland (SB: Simplemente Maria Press, 1997) [Spec Printers
Z478.86.S553 H44 1997], Scratching the Surface: A Visit to Lascaux
and Rouffignac (SB: Simplemente Maria Press, 1998) [Spec Printers
Z478.86.S553 H448 1998], The Western Horizon (2000), with husband
Macduff Everton, Western Trilogy (SB: Simplemente Maria Press,
2000) [Spec, Printers Z478.86.S553 H455 2000], Western Trilogy II
(SB: Simplemente Maria Press, 2001) [Spec, Printers Z478.86.S553 H456
2001], and On the Blue Shore of Silence: Poems of the Sea by Pablo
Neruda (2001).
Heizer, Robert Fleming (1915- ). Archaeologist
and author of numerous works on Native Americans, including Original
Accounts of the Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island (1973) [Spec F868.V5
H44 1973].
Herr, Charlotte. Author of Their Mariposa Legend:
A Romance of Santa Catalina (1921) [Main and Spec PS3515.E69 T44 1921].
Herrera-Sobek, María. UCSB professor of Chicana
and Chicano Studies. Author of The Bracero Experience: Elitelore Versus
Folklore (1979) [Coleccion GR111.M49 H47], The Mexican Corrido:
A Feminist Analysis (1990) [Coleccion PQ7180.H4 1990], The Representation
of Mexican Immigrant Women Workers in Ballad and Film: Issues of Ideology
and Nationalism (1992) [Coleccion ML3558.H472 1992], and Northward
Bound: The Mexican Immigrant Experience in Ballad and Song (1993)
[Coleccion ML3558.H47 1993].
Hervey, Harry (1900-1951). Novelist, screenwriter,
and travel writer who lived in Santa Barbara in 1930s. Works include:
The Black Parrot: A Tale of the Golden Chersonese (1923), Where
Strange Gods Call (1924) [Main DS508.H5], Ethan Quest: His Saga
(1925), Travels in French Indo-China (1928), Red Ending
(1929), The Iron Widow (1931), The Damned Don’t Cry (1939),
School for Eternity (1941) [Spec PS3515.E8125 S36 1941], The
Veiled Fountain (1947) [Main PS3515.E8125 V43], and Barracoon (1950)
[Main PS3515.E8125 B37]. A number of his works were made into movies,
including: The Cheat (Paramount, 1931), Prestige (RKO Pathe,
1932), The Wiser Sex (Paramount, 1932), The Devil’s in Love
(Fox, 1933), and A Son Comes Home (Paramount, 1936). See also:
Gilbar, Literary, 72.
Hiester, Marty. Author of Trails of the San
Rafael Wilderness (1974), with Ray Ford, Jr. [Spec F868.S23 H45 1974].
Higgins, Ardis O. Santa Barbara resident and author
of Windows on Women (1975) [Main and Spec HQ1399.H53 1975].
Higgins, George A. (1917-1994). Santa Barbara
surgeon and author of Hall of Cottage (Chiron Books, 1989)
[Spec F869.S45 H584 1989].
Hill, Laurance Landreth. Author
of Santa Barbara, Tierra Adorada: A Community History (1930), with
Marion Parks [Spec F869.S45 S6 and Spec, Wyles F869.S23 S4], as well
as La Reina: Los Angeles in Three Centuries (1929) [Main, Spec,
and Spec, Wyles F869.L8 H5].
Hillinger, Charles (1926- ). Author
of The California Islands (1958) [Main F868.S232 H5 and
Spec F868.S232 H5 1958], Hillinger’s California: Stories from All 58
Counties (Capra Press, 1997) [Spec, Printers Z478.86.C36 H554 1997],
Charles Hillinger’s Channel Islands: Santa Catalina, Santa Cruz, Anacapa,
San Miguel, San Nicolas, Santa Rosa, San Clemente, Santa Barbara (Santa
Cruz Island Foundation, 1998) [Main F868.S232 H555 1999], California
Characters: An Array of Amazing People (2000) [Spec, Printers Z478.86.C36
H544 2000].
Hilton, Francis W. (1889-1963). Prolific
writer of westerns, crime stories, and articles; came to Santa Barbara
to work for SB News-Press during the 1930s and 1940s. Works include:
Gray Sage (1928), Hell-Crazy Range (1934) [Spec PS3515.I6983
H44 1934], Phantom Rustlers (1934), Powder River (1935),
The Long Rope (1935) [Spec PS3515.I6983 L65 1950], Blazing Trails
(1936), Mad-Gun Mesa (1937), The Pioneer Herd (1938),
The Mañana Kid (1939) [Spec PS3515.I6983 M35 1939], and Skyline
Riders (1939) [Spec PS3515.I6983 S59 1939]. See also: SB News-Press,
Mar. 15, 1964, A16; Gilbar, Literary, 72.
Hobbs, Valerie (1941- ). Author of short
stories, young adult fiction, teaches in the writing program at UCSB.
Works include: How Far Would You Have Gotten If I Hadn’t Called You
Back? (1995) [Curric. Lab PZ7.H65237 Ho 1995], Get It While It’s
Hot. Or Not (1998) [Curric. Lab PZ7.H65237 Car 1999], Carolina
Crow Girl (1999) [Curric Lab PZ7.H65237 Car 1999], Charlie’s Run
(2000), Tender (2001), Sonny’s War (2002). See: SB News-Press,
Oct. 15, 2000, D7-8; SB News-Press, Dec. 3, 2000, D7.
*Hoffman, Hallock (1919- ). Author of
Loyalty by Oath: An Essay on the Extortion of Love [Main JC328.H6].
Associated with CSDI and contributor to CSDI publications such as Two
Faces of Federalism (1961). The CSDI Collection (Mss 18) has substantial
material relating to him. See also: SB News-Press, Mar. 15, 1964,
A16.
Hoffman, Margaret. Author of Dead in the Water
(2003), a thriller set in Santa Barbara.
Hoffmann, Eleanor (1895-1990). Santa Barbara resident,
author of children’s books and adult fiction. Works include: The Travels
of a Snail (1939), The Cat of Paris (1940), Feeding Our
Armed Forces (1943) [Spec UC703 .H65], Mischief in Fez (1943),
Sierra Sally (1944), The Four Friends (1946), The Lion
of Barbary (1946), Princess of the Channel Isles (1947) [Spec
PS3515.O2454 P75 1947], White Mare of the Black Tents (1949), The
Tall Stallion (1950), The Search for the Gold Fishhook (1951),
The Mystery of the Lion Ring (1953), Trouble at Sweet Springs
Ranch (1954), Summer at Horseshoe Ranch (1957), The Charmstone
(1958) [Spec PS3515.O2454 C43 1964], and Realm of the Evening Star:
A History of Morocco and The Land of the Moors (1965) [Main
and Spec DT314.H6]. See also: SB News-Press, Mar. 15, 1964, A17;
Gilbar, Literary, 3, 69.
Holder, Charles Frederick (1851-1915). Author
whose works include: An Isle of Summer, Santa Catalina Island (1893)
[Spec F868.L8 H62], Santa Catalina, an Isle of Summer: Its History,
Climate, Sports, and Antiquities (1895) [Spec F868.L8 H64], Life
in the Open: Sport with Rod, Gun, Horse, and Hound in Southern California
(1906) [SRLF SK55.H6], The Channel Islands of California: A Book for
the Angler, Sportsman, and Tourist (1910) [Spec F868.S232 H7 1910
and Spec, Wyles F868.S232 H7], Recreations of a Sportsman on the Pacific
Coast (1910) [Spec SH473.H75], The Game Fishes of the World
(1913) [SEL and Spec QL617.H64]. Also author of Charles Darwin: His
Life and Work (1891) [Spec, Darwin QH31.D2 H7] and Louis Agassiz:
His Life and Work (1893) [SRLF and Spec, Wyles QH31.A2 H6].
Holmes, Marie S. Santa Barbara resident and author
of The Chumash and Their Predecessors: An Annotated Bibliography
(Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1998), with John R. Johnson
[Native American Studies E99.C815 H65 1998].
Holzhauer, Mary. Author of Almost Heaven: A
Walk through Old Summerland (McNally & Loftin, 1997), with Myrna
Davis [Spec F869.S83 D38 1997].
Honikman, Alfred H. (1910- ). Santa Barbara
resident and former mayor of Cape Town, South Africa. Author of In
the Shadow of Apartheid (SB: Fithian, 1998) [Spec DT2405.C3653 H66
1998].
Hopkins, Prynce (1885-1970). Sometimes spelled
“Pryns” Hopkins. Santa Barbara resident and author of several works, including
the autobiographical Both Hands Before the Fire (1961) [Spec CT275.H645624
A3 1961]. Founder of two progressive schools for boys and a magazine to
promote social reform; talks of travels and meetings with Lady Churchill
and her son Winston in Cairo, Hitler in Munich, and Freud in Vienna.
Other works include: Father or Sons? (1927) [Spec BF173.H76 1927],
Aids to Successful Study (1941) [Spec LB1049.H6], From Gods
to Dictators (1944) [Main BL53.H6 and Spec BL53.H568], World Culture
(1945) [Spec CB425.H6], A Westerner Looks East (1951) [Main and
Spec DS9.H67], Oriental, Socialization, and Individuation (1963),
and World Invisible (1963). See also: SB News-Press, Mar.
15, 1964, A16; Gilbar, Literary, 54, 204-206.
Hopkins, Steven (1953- ). Santa Barbara resident
and author of The Leaving (1978) [Spec PS3558.O6364 L42 1978 and
Printers Z478.86.M83 H67 1978]. See also: Gilbar, Literary, 146.
Hopmans, Walter. Santa Barbara
resident and writer of poetry, plays, television scripts, and other works.
Author of Some Poems and Some Pictures (1989), Some Zen Zingers
(2001) [Spec PN6727.H5936 S64 2000]. See also: Gulbransen, SBNP,
12/3/00, D7.
Howe, Melodie Johnson (1943- ). Montecito
resident and mystery writer, whose works include: The Mother Shadow
(1989) [Main PS3558.O8926 M68 1989] and Beauty Dies (1994) [Spec
PS3558.O8926 B4 1994].
Howorth, Peter C. (1944- ). Santa Barbara
resident and director of the Santa Barbara Marine Mammal Center. Author
of Foraging Along the California Coast (Capra, 1977) [Spec SH400.8.U6
H68], The Abalone Book (1978), Channel Islands (1982) [Spec
F868.S232 H76 1982], Whales, Dolphins, Porpoises of the Pacific
(1985), and Sharks: Shorelines of America (1991). Also a frequent
contributor to Santa Barbara Magazine.
Hsü, Immanuel Chung-yueh (1923- ). Professor
Emeritus of History and author of several eminent works on Chinese history,
including The Rise of Modern China (1970) [Main and Spec DS754.H74].
Hudson, Travis. Curator of Anthropology at the
Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Works include: Crystals in
the Sky: An Intellectual Odyssey Involving Chumash Astronomy, Cosmology,
and Rock Art (1978), with Ernest Underhay [Native Am. Studies and
Spec E99.C815 H82], Chumash Indian Games (Santa Barbara Museum
of Natural History, 1980), with Jan Timbrook [Spec, Printers Z478.86.S3253
H83 1980], Guide to Painted Cave (McNally & Loftin, 1982) [Spec
E99.C815 H825 1982], The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction
Sphere (Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1982), with Thomas
C. Blackburn [Main, Native Amer. Studies and Spec E99.C815 H83 1982],
Time’s Flotsam: Overseas Collections of California Indian Culture
(Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1990), with Thomas C. Blackburn
[Native Amer. Studies E78.C15 B53 1990].
Huffington, Arianna Stassinopoulos (1950- ).
One-time Montecito resident, political commentator, and author. Works
include: The Female Woman (1973) [Women’s Studies HQ1154.S65 1973],
After Reason (1978), Maria: Beyond the Callas Legend (1980)
[Arts ML420.C18 S7 1980], The Gods of Greece (1983), Picasso:
Creator and Destroyer (1988), made into a 1996 movie by Merchant-Ivory
[Arts N6853.P5 S74 1988], The Fourth Instinct (1994), Greetings
From the Lincoln Bedroom (1998), How to Overthrow the Government
(2000). See: Gilbar, Literary, 157.
Huglin, Henry C. (1915- ). Santa Barbara resident,
retired Air Force Brigadier General who was involved with the Center for
the Study of Democratic Institutions in the 1960s. Author of Militarism:
Method or Madness (SB: CSDI, 1971). See also: SB News-Press,
Dec. 25, 1987, 21.
Humphreys, R. Stephen (1942- ). UCSB
Professor of history. Works include: From Saladin to the Mongols: The
Ayyubids of Damascus, 1193-1260 (1977) [Main DS97.3.H85], Tradition
and Innovation in Late Antiquity (1989) [Main DE59.T7 1989], The
Crisis of the Early Caliphate (1990) [Main DS38.2.T313 1985 v.15],
Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry (1991) [Main DS38.3.H856
1991], Between Memory and Desire: The Middle East in a Troubled Age
(1999) [Main DS63.1.H856 1999].
Hunt, Edwin Arthur. Santa Barbara
resident and author of Santa Barbara Days and Other Poems (1920)
[Spec PS3515.U535 S3 1920]. See also: Gilbar, Literary, 58.
Huse, Charles Enoch (1825-1898).
Resident of Santa Barbara in the 1850s. Works include: Sketch of the
History and Resources of Santa Barbara City and County, California (SB:
Office of the Daily Press, 1876) [Spec F869.S45 H875 1876], Diary of
“Judge” Charles E. Huse (1953), edited by William Henry Ellison [Spec,
Wyles F864.H8 A3], The Huse Journal: Santa Barbara in the 1850s (Santa
Barbara Historical Society, 1977), edited by Edith Bond Conkey [Main,
Coleccion, and Spec, Wyles F869.S45 H873].
*Hutchins, Robert Maynard (1899-1977). Founder
and leader of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions for
many years. Also, President of the University of Chicago (1929-1945),
Associate Director of the Ford Foundation (1951-1954), and several executive
positions with the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1946-1974. Author
of numerous works, many dealing with education, including: The Higher
Learning in America (1936) [Main LB2321.H82], No Friendly Voice
(1936) [Main LB2325.H8], Education for Freedom (1943) [Main
LB2321.H8], Great Books of the Western World (Editor in Chief,
1948-1957) [Main AC1.G7 and PN6013.G7], The Atomic Bomb Versus Civilization
(1945) [Spec JX1963.H88 1945], St. Thomas and the World State (1949)
[Spec JC361.H8], Morals, Religion, and Higher Education (1950)
[Spec LB2325.H76], The Democratic Dilemma (1951), Some Questions
About Education in North America (1952) [Spec LA210.H854 1952], The
Great Conversation: The Substance of a Liberal Education (Great Books
of the Western World, v. 1, 1952), The Conflict in Education in
a Democratic Society (1953) [Main LB875.H8], The University of
Utopia (1953) [Main LA209.2.H8 and Spec LA209.2.H87 1964b], Great
Books, the Foundation of a Liberal Education (1954), Freedom, Education,
and the Fund: Essays and Addresses, 1946-1956 (1956), Some Observations
on American Education (1956) [Main LA210.H86], In the Tradition
of Freedom (1957) [Spec JA1.C45 no.5], The Two Faces of Federalism
(1961) [Main and Spec JK325.H8], Robert M. Hutchins (1962) [Spec
PS3511.R94 Z9166 1962], The Political Animal (1962) [Main and Spec
JK273.H8], A Conversation on Education (1963) [Main LB41.H8 and
Spec LB875.H963], The Learning Society (1968) [Main LB875.H82 and
Spec LB875.H975], Zuckerlandl! (1968) [Main and Spec PN6162.H8],
and Contemporary Ideas in Historical Perspective (1977), edited
with Mortimer Adler. Special has a small Robert Maynard Hutchins Collection
(Mss 154) and much more extensive material in the CSDI Collection (Mss
18).
Hutchinson, Sean (1948- ). Montecito resident
and author of Crying Out Loud (SB: John Daniel, 1988) [Spec ML419.H87
A3 1988].
Hutchinson, William Henry (1910-1990). Western
historian, whose works include: Oil, Land, and Politics: The
California Career of Thomas R. Bard (1965) [Main HD9569.U6 H8]. Bard
lived in Hueneme and spent a good deal of time in Santa Barbara.
*Huxley, Aldous (1894-1963). Prolific scholar,
essayist, poet, and novelist. Special also has some manuscript material,
including tape recordings, primarily relating to the period when Huxley
was at UCSB in 1959. Works include: The Burning Wheel (1916) [Spec
PR6015.U98 B8], Jonah: Christmas 1917 (1917) [Spec PR6015.U98 J6],
The Defeat of Youth (1918) [Spec PR6015.U98 D44], Limbo
(1920) [Spec PR6015.U98 L5], Crome Yellow (1921) [Spec PR6015.U9
C76], Mortal Coils [Spec PR6015.U98 M58], Antic Hay (1923)
[Spec PR6015.U9 A82], On the Margin (1923) [Spec PR6015.U98 O6
1923], Those Barren Leaves (1925) [Spec PR6015.U98 T55 1925], Proper
Studies (1927) [Spec PR6015.U9 P7 1927], Point Counter Point
(1928) [Spec PR6015.U9 P6 1928], Do What You Will (1929) [Spec
PR6015.U9 D6 1929], Brief Candles (1930) [Spec PR6015.U9 B7 1930],
Music at Night (1931) [Spec PR6015.U98 M8 1931], The World of
Light (1931) [Spec PR6015.U98 W7 1931], Brave New World (1932)
[Spec PR6015.U9 B65 1932], Beyond the Mexique Bay (1934) [Spec
PR6015.U9 B49 1934], Eyeless in Gaza (1936) [Spec PR6015.U9 E92
1936], The Olive Tree (1936) [Spec PR6015.U9 O4 1936], Ends
and Means (1937) [Spec PR6015.U9 H53 1937 and Spec, Darwin HN17.H84
1937], An Encyclopædia of Pacifism (1937) [Spec PR6015.U98Z3 E5],
After Many a Summer (1939) [Spec PR6015.U9 A68 1939], Words
and Their Meanings (1940) [Spec PR6015.U98 W67], Grey Eminence
(1941) [Spec PR6015.U9 G74], The Art of Seeing (1942) [Spec PR6015.U98
A96], Time Must Have a Stop (1944) [Spec PR6015.U9 T55 1944], The
Perennial Philosophy (1945) [Spec PR6015.U9 P47 1945], Ape and
Essence (1948) [Spec PR6015.U98 A88 1948], Themes and Variations
(1950) [Spec PR6015.U98 T5 1950], The Devils of Loudun (1952) [Spec
PR6015.U98 D48 1952], The Doors of Perception (1954) [Spec PR6015.U9
D65 1954], The Genius and the Goddess (1955) [Spec PR6015.U9 G4
1955], Heaven and Hell (1956) [Spec PR6015.U98 H4 1956], Brave
New World Revisited (1958) [Spec PR6015.U9 B68 1958], Island
(1962) [Spec PR6015.U98 I7 1962], and Literature and Science (1963)
[Spec PR6015.U98 L53 1963]. See also: Gilbar, Literary, 207-209.
Hvolbøll, Eric (1955- ). Santa Barbara
resident and author of Fifty Years of County Planning: A Brief Account
of the First Half Century’s Activities of the Santa Barbara County Planning
Commission, 1928-1978 (1982) [Spec F868.S23 H96 1982] and La Capilla
de las Santa Cruz del Rosario (1989).
Hyde, Catherine Ryan (1955- ). Fiction
writer and instructor with SB Writers’ Conference. Works include: Funerals
for Horses (1997) [Spec PS3558.Y358 F86 1997], Earthquake Weather
(1998) [Spec PS3558.Y358 E27 1998], Pay It Forward (1999), made
into a 2000 movie by Mimi Leder, Electric God (2000) [Spec PS3558.Y358
E45 2000], Walter’s Purple Heart (2002). Associate editor of the
Santa Barbara Review in 1996. See also: Gilbar, Stories,
10; Gulbransen, SBNP, 10/15/00, D7 and SB News-Press, Oct.
29, 2000, D7.
Hyde, Gavin. Montecito resident and associate
professor at UCSB. Author of science fiction stories published in pulps
such as If: Worlds of Science Fiction (1953) and Star
Science Fiction Stories (1959). See also: SB News-Press, July
5, 1991.
Hyde, Robert (1900-1969). Known best for his East
Mountain Drive bohemian community of the 1950s and early 1960s, and author
of several works, including Six More at Sixty (1960) about raising
six adopted Mexican children later in life [Main HV875.H9 and Spec CT275.H86
A3]. UCSB Libraries have some of his works, including Crude (1927)
[Spec PS3515.Y48 C78 1927], Young Family (1928) [Main PS3515.Y48
Y68 1928], and Winds of Gobi (1930) [Spec PS3515.Y48 W55 1930].
See also: Gilbar, Tales, 77; Gilbar, Literary, 210-13.
Hynes, Samuel Lynn (1924- ). Author and scholar
who was stationed at the Marine Corps air station where UCSB is now located;
wrote Flights of Passage: Reflections of a World War II Aviator
(1988) [Main D767.9.H96 1988].
Ingram, Katie. Santa Barbara
resident, writer of poetry and prose. Co-founder of the Santa Barbara
Poetry Festival.
Irvine, Alexander (1863-1941). Moved to
Santa Barbara in 1920, left for Hollywood in 1937. Author of From
the Bottom Up: The Life Story of Alexander Irvine (1910) [Spec HX84.I7
A3], The Souls of Poor Folk (1921), The Carpenter and Some Educated
Gentlemen (1921), The Carpenter and His Kingdom (1922), My
Lady of the Chimney Corner (1922) [Spec PS3517.R8 M8 1922 and Printers
Z239.I7 M9], A Yankee With the Soldiers of the King (1923), A
Fighting Parson (1930) [SRLF BV3785.I7 A3], Anna’s Wishing Chair,
and Other Chimney Corner Stories (1937), My Cathedral: A Vision
of Friendship (1945), and The Chimney Corner Revisited (1984)
[Main PS3517.R8 C45 1984] See also: Gilbar, Literary, 62.
Irwin, Merle (1897-1985). Santa Barbara
resident and author of Joyful Journey (1981) [Main and Spec BR1725.I79
A34 1981].
Isham, Mary Otis (1874-1971). Montecito
resident, author of What’s in a Name? A Story of My Rose Garden
(1938) [Printers Z478.86.S33 I75].
*Isherwood, Christopher (1904-1986). An early
UCSB Libraries Corle lecturer, who had been visiting Santa Barbara regularly
since 1944. Special has numerous first editions. He wrote A Single
Man (1964) while teaching here [Main PR6017.S79 S5 and Spec PR6017.S5
S55] and My Guru and His Disciple (1970) contains descriptions
of Santa Barbara and Montecito [Spec PR6017.S5 Z514 1980 and Spec, ARC
PR6017.S5 Z514 1981]. See also: Gilbar, Literary, 86-87, 185.
Iyer, Pico (1957- ). Travel writer, novelist,
and literary critic who has lived in Santa Barbara off and on for most
of his life. Got his start writing for the Santa Barbara News &
Review. Works include Video Night in Kathmandu, and Other Reports
from the Not-So-Far East (1988) [Main and Spec DS10.I87 1988], The
Lady and The Monk: Four Seasons in Kyoto (1991) [Spec DS897.K84 I95
1991], Falling Off the Map: Some Lonely Places of the World (1993)
[Spec G465.I94 1993], the novel Cuba and the Night (1995) [Spec
PS3559.Y47 C8 1995], Tropical Classical: Essays from Several Directions
(1997) [Main and Spec PS3559.Y47 T76 1997], Global Soul (2000)
[Spec G530.I97 I97 2000], Abandon (2003) [Spec PS3559.Y47 A64 2003],
and Sun After Dark: Flights into the Foreign (2004) [Spec G465.I95
2004]. His parents (Raghavan and Nandini), both taught at UCSB. See
also: Gilbar, Tales, 171; Gilbar, Literary, 105.
Iyer, Raghavan Narasimhan (1930-1995).
Taught at UCSB and was author of a number of religious and philosophical
works, which include: The Glass Curtain Between Asia and Europe
(1965) [Main CB251.I9], The Moral and Political Thought of Mahatma
Gandhi (1973) [Main DS481.G3 I94 and Spec JC273.G28 I9 1973], Parapolitics:
Toward the City of Man (1979) [Main JA71.I94], Novus Ordo Seclorum
(SB: Concord Grove Press, 1980) [Spec, ARC JA71.I937 1980], The Jewel
in the Lotus (SB: Concord Grove Press, 1983) [Spec, ARC BL624.J49
1983], and The Society of the Future (SB: Concord Grove Press,
1984) [Spec, ARC BF637.S4 I93 1984]. He was also associated with the
Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions and Special has a large
collection of the Center’s materials (Mss 18). Father of Pico Iyer. See
also: Gilbar, Literary, 105.
If you would like to know
more about our collections, or would like to contribute additional materials,
please contact us at: Email
Special
Collections or telephone (805) 893-3062.
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