Abigail Williams is Lord White Fellow and Professor of Eighteenth-Century Studies at St. Peter’s College, University of Oxford.
“A lively survey. . . . Williams’s book is welcome because her
research and insights make us conscious of how we, today, use
books.”—John Sutherland, New York Times Book Review
“Williams’s charming pageant of anecdotes, as revealed in diaries,
letters and marginalia, conjures a world strikingly different from
our own but surprisingly similar in many ways, a time when reading
was on the rise and whole worlds sprang up around it.”—Washington
Post
“The inestimable value of Williams’s book is that it offers us,
beyond the shrewd and apt commentary, new things to understand and
to feel among the sheer diversity and number of its eloquent
lives.”—Min Wild, Times Literary Supplement
“This lively and original study, richly documented and happily free
of jargon… has brought to life the story of how print worked on
people in the past.”—Toby Barnard, Dublin Review of Books
“The Social Life of Books ranges confidently and with fascinating
detail over a great number of types of reading venues, reading
materials, and readers.” —James Raven, American Historical
Review
“This book confidently explores a fascinating topic. Its strength
lies in its sheer wealth of examples, especially the many cases
recovered from provincial archives that freshly illustrate the
habits and eccentricities of eighteenth-century readers. This is a
book that any reader with an interest in the eighteenth century
will enjoy and value.”—John Mullan, University College London
"A comprehensive account, impressively documented and vividly
illustrated, of the social history of reading, by an author whose
own reading skills are matched by her brilliantly mastered
erudition."—Claude Rawson, Maynard Mack Professor of English
Emeritus, Yale University
“The Social Life of Books is a magnificent, genuinely innovative
achievement that will appeal not only to scholars of literature and
book history, not only to historians, but to all lovers of books
and reading.”—Markman Ellis, Queen Mary University of London
“This is a magnificent achievement. Williams approaches the history
of reading from a wide purview, offering research into the price of
books, on literacy, and on circulating libraries, book shops, book
clubs and other forms of book sharing, including book theft. It
makes a very compelling case for the cultures of sociable reading
in eighteenth-century Britain.”—Markman Ellis, Queen Mary
University of London
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