"An entertaining and thoughtful work which demonstrates that
literacy and reading in the early national period involved a
complex interplay of cultural, economic, and technological forces
and affected Americans at many different levels in their public and
private lives."--Labor History
"An indispensable work for nineteenth-century
Americanists."--Studies in Popular Culture
"So often books written about reading could make one swear off
reading altogether...But Mr. Zboray's prose is a pleasure to
read...A readable and thought-provoking study."--New York
History
"This challenging study deserves a wide audience; scholars from
several disciplines will find much worth thinking about in Zboray's
pages."--Georgia Historical Quarterly
"A comprehensive, innovative, and timely study, Ronald J. Zboray's
impressive book sets a new standard for histoire du livre
explorations in the American context...Zboray's book establishes
itself as an authoritative account of a decidedly segmented reading
populace."--American Historical Review
"Few historians have done more to further our understanding of the
production and distribution of books in the mid-nineteenth
century...[The book's] extensive documentation...should make it
required reading for students of the history of communications,
print culture, and the book trade."--The Journal of American
History
"Delightful to read, and [Zboray's] work will very likely encourage
a great many young scholars to pursue other questions encompassed
in book history. For the motivation it provides alone, this book
will serve as a spectacular monument."--The Library Quarterly
"Zboray has handled and read virtually every account of the reading
habits and practices of antebellum Americans and brought them into
perspective and sense."--Journal of American Culture
"A welcome compendium of this scholarship and a bit more...A very
ambitious work...Zboray delves into relatively unexamined areas in
search of information about the elusive historical reader...This
book provides a wealth of information..."--Publishing Research
Quarterly
"Zboray manages to reveal complexities of the antebellum book
market that will significantly add to our understanding of American
cultural and economic history."--Business History Review
"For students of library history, Zboray's impressively researched
effort points to exciting possibilities. If American library
historians begin looking at their subject matter through some of
the same lenses Zboray harnesses in A Fictive People, instead of
more traditional institutional lenses evident in previous
historiography, contemporary generations of library professionals
might develop a better historical perspective on the library's
social and
cultural role."--Libraries & Culture
"A Fictive People is a thought-provoking, interdisciplinary
study...This important book adds significant complexity to our
understanding of the antebellum reading public and the publishing
industry. It expands our knowledge not only of literature, reading,
and related topics, but also of conceptions of the 'American' self
and patterns of American life."--Journal of Interdisciplinary
History
"A Fictive People stands as a clever and significant book that
weaves several hitherto separate strands of the antebellum story
into a coherent and engaging plot."--Journal of the Early Republic
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