Bingham, Millicent Todd. Ancestors' Brocades: The Literary Discovery of Emily Dickinson. New York: Harper, 1945. The passions and politics of Dickinson's first publication after her death, as told by a completely interested party. Because it is so biased, it's been underrated by Dickinson scholars; it makes for a wonderful story of the social position of literature in late Victorian New England.
Brose, Nancy Harris, et al. Emily Dickinson: Profile of the Poet as Cook with Selected Recipes. Amherst, MA, 1976.
Chappell, Diane Landry. "The selection of Emily Dickinson's poems in college textbook anthologies, 1890-1976." DAI 40: 5054A. 1980. [U of Tennessee]
Harris, Marguerite. Emily Dickinson: Letters from the World. 1970. Forty-five modern poetic tributes to ED.
Karasik, Judy. "Emily Dickinson: The Movie." The New York Times Book Review (1 February 1987): 25. Humor.
Kennedy, Joyce Deveau. "O'Neill's Lavinia Mannon and the Dickinson Legend." American Literature 49 (1977): 108-113. The Dickinson family was a model for the Mannons in Eugene O'Neill'sMourning Becomes Electra.
Loeschke, Maravene. "Challenges of Portraying Emily Dickinson in William Luce's Play 'The Belle of Amherst'." The Emily Dickinson Journal 2.2 (1993): 124-129.
Longsworth, Polly. Austin and Mabel: The Amherst Affair & Love Letters of Austin Dickinson and Mabel Loomis Todd. New York: Farrar, 1984. Letters between Dickinson's brother and her first editor, connected with prose links.
---. The World of Emily Dickinson. New York: Norton, 1990. Photographs and ana, presented with superb production values.
<LILuce, William.The Belle of Amherst: A Play Based on the Life of Emily Dickinson. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1976.
Murray, Barbara M. "The 'Scarlet experiment': Emily Dickinson's abortion experience." DAI 50: 685-686A. 1989. {U of Tennessee: William H. Shurr] Did Emily Dickinson have an abortion in 1861? I would have said "No," myself, but this dissertation says "Yes."
[Phi Delta Gamma] Guests in Eden: Emily Dickinson. Martha Dickinson Bianchi. New York: Zeta Chapter, Phi Delta Gamma, 1946. Memorial pamphlet for Bianchi, including brief essays on ED.
Strickland, Georgiana. "Emily Dickinson's Colorado." The Emily Dickinson Journal 8.1 (1999): 1-23. Dickinson never went to Colorado, but heard a lot about the place from traveling and resident friends.
Wand, Martin, and Richard B. Sewall. "'Eyes be Blind, Heart be Still': A New Perspective on Emily Dickinson's Eye Problem." The New England Quarterly 52 (1979): 400-406. Her condition was "exotropia"; she was walleyed.