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Heyd, Uriel. Reading Newspapers: Press and Public in Eighteenth-Century Britain and America. (SVEC, 2012:03.) Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2012. Pp. xii + 302; bibliography; 11 illustrations; index. [A well resourced, empirical study of newspapers across the eighteenth century and in multiple cities, drawing on more than evidence from newspapers (such as their proposals and introductory columns); he also draws on references in other literary forms, as plays and diaries. Heyd examines how the producers’ conceived of their products and how readers put newspapers to use, showing that newspapers were held on to and later consulted. Part 1 is on “The Newspapers,” with chapters on their role, their consumption, and indexing by printer and reader; Part 2 is on “Readers,” with chapters entitled “the Newspaper World on Stage,” “Quidnunc: The Obsessive Reader,” and “The Reader as Collector.” Three appendices related to Harbottle Dorr (a Boston shopkeeper) and indexing follow a conclusion. Rev. by Stacy Erickson in Reception: Texts, Readers, Audiences, History, 5 (2013), 91-93; (favorably) by Andrew Hobbs in SHARP News, 23, no. 3 (Summer 2014), 8-9; by Carol Sue Humphrey in Journalism History, 38 (2013), 257; by Eugenia M. Palmegiano on JHistory, October 2012, electronic journal linked to H-Net.org; by Jonathan Senchyne in Early American Literature, 49 (2014), 830-34.]

Higgins, Anthony. Constructing the Criollo Archive: Subjects of Knowledge in the Bibliotheca Mexicana and the Rusticatio Mexicana. (Purdue Studies in Romance Literatures, 21.) West Lafayette, IN: Purdue U. Press, 2000. Pp. xvii + 283; index. [On Mexican intellectual life, focusing on Juan José de Eguiara y Eguren's Biblioteca mexicana and Rafael Landivar's Rusticatio mexicana.]

Hill, Bridget, and Christopher Hill. "Catharine Macaulay's History and her Catalogue of Tracts." The Seventeenth Century, 8 (1993), 269-85.

Hill, Tracey. “Owners and Collectors of the Printed Books of the Early Modern Lord Mayors’ Shows.” Library & Information History, 30 (2014), 151-71; abstract. [Beginning in the 1580s printed works accompanied the London Lord Mayors’ shows, and Hill investigates who in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries collected them, such as Anthony Wood and John Philip Kemble.]

Hillen, Wolfgang, and Annemarie Nilges. Das Bibliothekswesen in Frankreich. (Elemente des Buch- und Bibliothekswesens, 14.) Wiesbaden: Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 1992. Pp. xiv + 289.

Hilliker, Robert. “Engendering Identity: The Discourse of Familial Education in Anne Bradstreet and Marie de l’Incarnation.” Early American Literature, 42, no. 3 (2007), 435-70.

Hillyard, Brian. "Acquisitions of Incunables by the Advocates' Library before 1808." Edinburgh Bibliographical Society Transactions, 6, pt. 3 (1995), 92-114.

Hillyard, Brian. “David Steuart and Giambattista Bodoni: On the Fringes of the British Book Trade.” Pp. 113-25 in Worlds of Print: Diversity on the Booktrade. (Print Networks, 8.) Edited by John Hinks and Catherine Armstrong. London: BL; New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll, 2006. Pp. xiii + 240; illus.

Hillyard, Brian (ed.). David Stewart Esquire, An Edinburgh Collector: The 1801 Sale Catalogue of Part of His Library, Reproduced from the Unique Copy in New York Public Library. Introduction by Brian Hillyard. (Edinburgh Bibliographical Society Occasional Publications.) Edinburgh: Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, in Association with the National Library of Scotland, 1993. Pp. 88; illus. [Contains in facsimile the auction catalogue detailing the contents of the library of Edinburgh merchant David Steuart (1747-1824). Rev. (briefly) by T. H. Howard-Hill in PBSA, 87 (1993), 117; by K. Swift in The Bibliotheck, 18 (1993), 65-67.]

Hillyard, Brian. "Thomas Ruddiman and the Advocates' Library, 1728-52." Library History, 8 (1990), 157-70.

Hillyard, Brian. “Working toward a History of Scottish Book Collecting.” Pp. 181-86 in Six Centuries of the Provincial Book Trade in Britain. Edited by Peter Isaac. Foreword by J. Michael Smethurst. Winchester: St. Paul’s Bibliographies, 1990. Pp. xii + 212.

Hillyard, Brian, and David F. Norton. "The David Hume Bookplate: A Cautionary Note." Book Collector, 40 (1991), 539-44; illus.

Hilton, Mary. Women and the Shaping of the Nation's Young: Education and Public Doctrine in Britain, 1750-1850. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007. Pp. 286; illus.

Hilton, Mary, and Pam Hirsch (eds.). Practical Visionaries: Women, Education, and Social Progress, 1790-1930. (Women and Men in History.) Harrow, U.K., and New York: Longman, 2000. Pp. xiii + 252; illus.; index.

Hilton, Mary, and Jill Shefrin (eds.). Educating the Child in Enlightenment Britain: Beliefs, Cultures, Practices. (Ashgate Studies in Childhood, 1700 to the Present.) Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009. Pp. ix + 243; bibliography; index. [Includes the editors’ introduction; Sophia Woodley’s “’O miserable and most ruinous measure’: The Debate between Private and Public Education in Britain, 1760-1800”; Anne Stott’s “Evangelicalism and Enlightenment: The Educational Agenda of Hannah More”; Mary Clare Martin’s “Marketing Religious Identity: Female Educators, Methodist Culture, and 18th-century Childhood”; Carol Percy’s “Learning and Virtue: English Grammar and the 18th-Century Girls’ School”; Maurice Whitehead’s “’Superior to the rudest shocks of adversity’: English Jesuit Education and Culture in the Long Eighteenth Century, 1688-1832”; Deirdre Raftery’s “Colonizing the Mind: The Use of English Writers in the Education of the Irish Poor, c. 1750-1850”; Jill Shefrin’s “’Adapted for and used in infants’ schools, nurseries, &c.’: Booksellers and the Infant School Market” (163-80); M. O. Grenby’s “Delightful Instruction? Assessing Children’s Use of Educational Books in the Long Eighteenth Century”; and several other essays. Rev. by Joanne Bailey Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 35 (2012), 251-52.]

Hilton, Mary, Marag Styles, and Victor Watson (eds.). Opening the Nursery Door: Reading, Writing, and Childhood (1600-1900). London: Routledge, 1997. Pp. x + 242; 14 illus.; index. [In addition to Mary Hilton's introduction (1-13), eight of the fourteen essays in the collection concern the 18th century. Shirley Brice Heath's "Child's Play or Finding the Ephemera of Home" examines the archive--including alphabet cards and handmade children's books--assembled by Jane Johnson, 1706-1759, wife of an English vicar, who educated her children with great creativity (17-30); Victor Watson's "Jane Johnson: A Very Pretty Story To Tell Children" also discusses Mrs. Johnson and what her work and her archive imply about childhood then (31-46). Other essays of interest include Margaret Spufford's "Women Teaching Reading to Poor Children in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries" (47-62; illus.); David Whitley's "Samuel Richardson's Aesop" (65-79; illus.); John Rowe Townsend's "John Newbery and Tom Telescope" (80-88; illus.); and three essays involving women writing for children: Norma Clarke's "'The Cursed Barbauld Crew': Women Writers and the Writing for Children in the Late Eighteenth Century" (91-103), Nicholas Tucker's "Fairy Tales and Their Opponents: In Defense of Mrs. Trimmer" (104-16); and Morag Styles' "'Of the Spontaneous Kind'? Women Writing Poetry for Children--From Jane Johnson to Christina Rossetti" (142-59). Andrea Immel reviews this collection (with another book) in Children's Literature Association Quarterly, 25, no. 4 (Winter 2000/2001), 227-29.]



Hinks, John, and Matthew Day (eds.). From Compositors to Collectors: Essays on Book-Trade History. (Print Networks, 11.) London: British Library; New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2012. Pp. xviii + 382; illus; index. [The volume includes nineteen essays, nine under the headings “Compositors” and ten under “Collectors.” The first grouping, with several essays on publishers and printers, includes Mariko Nagase’s “The Publication of The Mayor of Quinborough (1661) and the Printer’s Identity,” identifying John Macocke on the bases of damaged type-pieces and printer’s flowers, with remarks on its paperstock, accidentals, and layout (3-26, facsimiles); Matthew Day’s “’Generally very tedious, often trifling’: Promoting Eighteenth-Century Travel Collections” (27-42); Daniel Cook’s “’Labor ipse voluptas’: John Nichols’ Swiftiana,” with an account of that printer-publisher’s research into Swift materials hitherto unpublished, which Nichols published in Supplement volumes (43-62); Stephen W. Brown’s “Pirates, Editors, and Readers: How Distribution Rewrote William Smellie’s Philosophy of Natural History” (63-82); Brian Hillyard’s “Thomas Ruddiman: Librarian, Publisher, Printer and Collector,” with detailed information from that printer’s ledgers (83-108; facsimiles). The second section includes Daniel Starza Smith’s “’La conquest du sang real’: Edward, Second Viscount Conway’s Quest for Books,” a collector born in 1594, whose purchases reach into mid-century (199-216); Iain Beavan’s “Who Was Dr. James Fraser of Chelsea?”--Fraser (1645-1731) was tutor to the Berkeley family, a courtier, and a benefactor of parish libraries and Aberdeen University Library during the early 18th century (217-34); Maureen Bell’s “Titus Wheatcroft: An Eighteenth-Century Reader and his Manuscripts,” treating Wheatcroft’s cataloguing of his books in 1723-1743 (235-61); Stephen W. Brown’s “Singing by the Book: Eighteenth-Century Scottish Songbooks, Freemasonry, and Burns,” which examines collections of Freemasons’ songs (261-78); William Noblett’s “The Sale of James West’s Library in 1773,” the sale occurring the year of this learned lawyer’s death (279-96); S. C. Arndt’s “The Linen Hall Library: Provincial-Metropolitan Connections in the Late Eighteenth-Century” (297-308; table with distribution of titles by subject categories); Lindsay Levy’s “Was Sir Water Scott a Bibliomanioc?” (309-21; facsimiles); and Joseph Marshall’s “’Several Tons of Books’: The Creation, Travels and Rediscovery of Thomas Cassidy’s Recusant Library” (323-39; facsimiles). This is one of the meatiest collections in the Print Networks series. Rev. (briefly) by R. L. Cope in Australian Library Journal, 61, no. 3 (2012), 238; by Robert Laurie in Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, 7 (2012), 129-31; (favorably) by Peter F. McNally in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of Canada, 50, no. 2 (2012), 270-72; by James M’Kenzie-Hall in Quadrat, no. 25 (Summer 2012), 24-30; by David Pearson in Times Literary Supplement (7 December 2012), 12.]

Hinrichs, Wiard, and Ulrich Joost (comps.). Lichtenbergs Bücherwelt. Ein Bücherfreund und Benutzer der Göttinger Bibliothek: Katalog der Ausstellung im Foyer der Niedersächsischen Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek anläßlich der Jahrestagung der Lichtenberg-Gesellschaft 1989. (Lichtenberg-Studien, 3.) Göttingen: Wallstein, 1989. Pp. 109; illustrations. [Rev. in Philobiblon, 34, no. 1 (1990), 73; in Das achtzehnte Jahrhundert, 14 (1990), 302.]

Hirsch, John C. “Samuel Pepys as a Collector and Student of Ballads.” Modern Language Review, 106 (2011), 47-62.

Hirschegger, Manfred. "Geschichte der Grazer Universitätsbibliothek bis zum Jahre 1918." Biblos [Vienna], 44 (1995), 297-324.



Historia de las bibliotecas en los estados de la República Méxicana. Mexico, D.F.: Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes; Dirección General de Bibliotecas, 1986-92. Illus. [20 volumes published, addressing different states, with diverse compilers and dates.]

The History of the University of Oxford. Vols. 6-7: Nineteenth-Century Oxford, Part 1. Edited by M. G. Brock and M. C. Curthoys. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997, 2000. Illustrations; indices. Part of a series begun in 1984 with T. H. Aston as general editor; Vol. 5, The Eighteenth Century, edited by L. S. Sutherland and L. G. Mitchell, appeared in 1986. Rev. by J. P. Ellens in Catholic Historical Review, 86 (2000), 345-46; by W. C. Lubenow in Journal of British Studies, 39 (2000), 247-62.]

Hoare, Peter. “Archbishop Tenison’s Library in St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields: The Building and its History.” London Topological Record, 29 (2006), 127-50.

Hoare, Peter (gen. ed.). Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland. 3 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 2006. Pp. lvi + 1990. [Vol. 1: To 1640: ed. by Elizabeth Leedham-Green and Teresa Webber; Vol. 2: 1640-1850: ed. by Giles Mandelbrote and Keith A. Manley; Vol. 3: 1850-2000: ed. by Alistair Black and Peter Hoare. Volume 2 contains 31 essays by diverse experts (pp. xii + 575). Rev. by Andrew Dillon in Libraries & the Cultural Record, 44 (2009), 490-93; by Jonathan Rose in a review essay (“One Giant Leap for Library History”) in Library Quarterly, 78 (2008), 129-34.]

Hoare, Peter. "The Librarians of Glasgow University over 350 Years: 1641-1991." Library Review, 40, nos. 2-3 (1991), 27-43.

Hoare, Peter (ed.). “Libraries at Times of Cultural Change.” [Special issue of] Libraries and Culture, 24 (1989), 1-109.

Hoare, Peter. “The Library World of Nottinghamshire in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century.” Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire, 114 (2010), 113-33.

Hoare, Peter. “Some Parochial Libraries in the East Midlands.” Library & Information History, 27 (2011), 223-28.

Hobson, Anthony. "L'abate e il marchese." La Bibliofilía, 102 (2000), 103-08. [On the book collecting of Alexander Hamilton, tenth Duke of Hamilton.]

Hobson, Anthony. "Appropriations from Foreign Libraries during the French Revolution and Empire." Bulletin du bibliophile (1989), 255-72.

Hobson, Anthony, and Thomas Woodcock. "The Owners of the 'Carpe Diem' Armorial Binding Stamp." Book Collector, 54 (2005), 539-44.

Hochedlinger, Michael. Österreichische Archivgeschichte: Vom Spätmittelalter bis zum Ende des Papierzeitalters. Vienna: Böhlau, 2013. Pp. 522; 281 illus.

Hoeveler, J. David. Creating the American Mind: Intellect and Politics in the Colonial Colleges. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. Pp. xvi + 379; bibliography; illustrations; index. [Rev. (fav.) by John A. Baird, Jr., in Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 128 (2004), 312-13.]

Hoeveler, Diane Long. “The Gothic Chapbook and the Urban Reader.” Pp. 55-72 in Romanticism and the City. Edited by Larry H. Peer. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Pp. xiii + 283.

Hofmann-Randall, Christina (ed.). Fränkische Kinderbücher aus fünf Jahrhunderten: Eine Ausstellung der Universitätsbibliothek, 19. Oktober-11. November 2001: Katalog. (Schriften der Universitätsbibliothek Erlangen-Nürnbert, 40.) Erlangen: Universitätsbibliothek, 2001. Pp. 180; illus. (some in color).

Hofmeyr, Isabel. "How Bunyan Became English: Missionaries, Translation, and the Discipline of English Literature." Journal of British Studies, 41 (2002), 84-119.

Hoftijzer, Paul G. “A Princely Acquisition for the Bibliotheca Thysiana in Leiden: The Books of Juliana Catharina, Princess of Portugal (1607-80).” Quærendo, 41 (2011), 263-75.

Holden, Paul. “’One of the Most Remarkable Things in London’: A Visit to the Lord Treasurer’s Library in 1713 by Samuel Molyneux.” Electronic British Library Journal (2010), article 10. PDF. . [Molyneux (1689-1728) visited the Harleian library early in February 1713, during a tour of antiquarian libraries in London, Oxford, and Cambridge, which he described in seven letters to his learned uncle; these accounts were transcribed in a letter book now held by the Southampton City Archive and is being transcribed for publication by Holden.]

Hoftijzer, P[aul]. G., and Otto S. Lankhorst. Drukkers, boekverkopers en lezers in de Republiek: Een historiografische en bibliografische handleiding. (Nederlandse cultuur in Europese context, Monografieën en studies, 1.) Rev. and augmented 2nd ed. The Hague: SdU Uitgevers, 2000. Pp. xiv + 265; bibliography; illus. (including portraits); index. [A survey of bibliographical studies within the Netherlands and, more broadly, about Dutch print history, with chapters on technical, commercial, and social aspects of printing (and studies of these fields), with an inclusive bibliography of relevant studies (183-242). The first edition appeared in 1995. Rev. (fav.) by Anna E. C. Simoni in Library, 7th ser., 3 (2002), 100-02.]

Holdsworth, Deryck W. “The Counting House Library: Creating Mercantile Knowledge in the Age of Sail.” Pp. 133-56 in Geographies of the Book. Edited by Miles Ogborn and Charles W. J. Withers. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2010. Pp. xiv + 302; illustrations.

Holman, Peter. “The Sale Catalogue of Gottfried Finger’s Music Library: New Light on London Concert Life in the 1690s.” Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle, 43 (2010), 23-38.

Holmes, Heather. “Analysing a Source of Evidence for the Purchase and Ownership of Scottish Books in the Late Eighteenth Century: A Comparison of Three Subscription Lists in the Agricultural Books of David Young of Perth Published in 1785, 1788 and 1790.” Folk Life: Journal of Ethnological Studies, 47 (2009), 32-50.

Holmes, Heather. "The Circulation of Scottish Agricultural Books during the Eighteenth Century." Agricultural History Review, 54, no. 1 (2006), 45-78.



Homenaxe a Daria Vilariño. Santiago de Compostela: Biblioteca Universitaria, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, 1993. Pp. 508; bibliographies; figures. [The publisher is listed in Worldcat as the corporate author/editor. Includes "Algunas noticias sobre D. Francisco del Valle Inclán, primer bibliotecario de la Universidad de Santiago" by Mercedes Alsina Gómez-Ulla (243-51); "Librerías de Ordenes religiosas en la Biblioteca Universitaria de Santiago: Algunas notas sobre la Librería del Colegio de Monterrey" by José Daniel Buján Núñez (253-58); "Una biblioteca ovetense del siglo XVIII: La colección bibliográfica de Jacinto Díaz Miranda, chantre de la Catedral" by Ramón Rodríguez Alvarez (493-99); "La biblioteca de San Francisco de Santiago antes de la exclaustración" by José Garcia Oro (387-96); "Un manual de bibliotecas de 1747: 'Sobre el modo de ordenar y componer una librería' escrito por Oliver Legipont" by Xosé Ramón Lema Bendaña (433-41; 2 of plates); "Los avatares de una Imprenta en Madrid" by Jaime Moll Roqueta (479-85).]

Honeybone, Diana, and Michael Honeybone (eds.). The Correspondence of the Spalding Gentlemen’s Society, 1710-1761. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, 2010. Pp. xxx + 272. [An edition of documents related to a learned society founded in Spalding, Lincolnshire in 1710 by Maurice Johnson, whose membership’s aims included regular meetings for lecture and discusson and also founding a lending library. Over 50, but only ten percent, of the Society’s correspondence is transcribed (most are presented in abstracts). Rev. (favorably, with reservations) by James E. Tierney in Scriblerian, 46, no. 1 (Autumn 2013), 57-59.]

Honings, Rick. “Een zoet vergif voor verstand en hart: De ontwikkeling van de leescultuur in Leiden 1760-1860.” Tijdschrift voor Nederlandse Taal- en Letterkunde, 127, no. 3 (2011 [2012]), 263-89; summary in English.

Hoock-Demaire, Marie-Claire. Lectures féminines de la Révolution française en Allemagne à la fin du XVIIIe siècle.” Pp. 59-65 in Les Femmes et la Révolution française: L’Effet 89. Edited by Marie-France Brive. Toulouse: Presses universitaires du Mirail, 1991. Pp. 479. [Papers from a conference in April 1989.]

Hoogenboezem, Daphne. “Madame D’Aulnoy en Angleterre: La Réception des Contes des fées.” Gutenberg-Jahrbuch, 86 (2011), 247-60.

Hopfner, Johanna. Mädchenerziehung und weibliche Bildung um 1800: Im Spiegel der populär-pädagogischen Schriften der Zeit. (Erlangen Pädagogische Studien.) Bad Heilbrunn/Obb.: Julius Klinkhardt, 1990. Pp. 216. [Rev. by Pia Schmid in Paedagogica Historica, 28 (1992), 125-26.]

Hopkins, Judith. "The 1791 French Cataloguing Code and the Origins of the Card Catalogue." Libraries and Culture, 27 (1992), 378-404; abstract; 6 of chronology [on French laws and other events relating to the 1791 code]; 1 of illustration.

Hoquet, Thierry. "La Bibliothèque botanique de Benjamin Delessert." Bulletin du bibliophile (2002), 100-41; illustrations; summary in English.

Horobin, Simon. “Richard James and the Seventeenth-Century Provenance of British Library MS Cotton Caligula A.xi.” Journal of the Early Book Society for the Study of Manuscripts and Printing History, 13 (2010), 249-54.

Houdt, Toon van. "Emmanuel Schelstraete: Kerkhistoricus en prefect van de Vaticaanse bibliotheek (1683-1692)." Trajecta, 6 (1997), 19-33; illus.

Houston, R. A. [Robert Allan Houston, also signing work as “Rab Houston”]. "Literacy, Education, and the Culture of Print in Enlightenment Edinburgh." History, 78, no. 254 (1993), 373-92.

Houston, R[obert]. A. Literacy in Early Modern Europe: Culture and Education (1500-1800). New York: Longman, 1988. Pp. ix + 266; bibliography [235-62]; index. [Rev. by L. W. B. Brockliss in British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 14 (1991), 79-80; J. A. Sharpe in History: The Journal of the Historical Association, 75 (1990), 483-84. Reprinted in 2001 as by Robert Allan Houston (see below).]

Houston, R[obert]. A. Scottish Literacy and the Scottish Identity: Illiteracy and Society in Scotland and Northern England, 1600-1800. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 1985. Pp. 335. [Rev. by Harvey J. Graff in American Historical Review, 92 (1987), 674-75; (favorably) in rev. article ("New Questions and New Approaches in the Study of the 'History of the Book'") by David A. Rawson in Eighteenth-Century Life, n.s. 15, no. 3 (1991), 103-12.]

Houston, Robert Allan. Literacy in Early Modern Europe: Culture and Education, 1500-1800. London: Peterson, 2001. Pp. x + 295. [As noted above, first published by Longman in 1989 (ix + 266). Translated into Italian as Cultura e istruzione nell’Europa moderna (Bologna: Il Mulino, 1997); pp. 339.]

Howard, Donald E. The Role of Reading in Nine Famous Lives. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2005. Pp. vii + 199. [Begins with chapters on Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson.]

Howsam, Leslie, and James Raven (eds.). Books between Europe and the Americas: Connections and Communities, 1620-1860. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Pp. xii + 318; index. [Relevant essays for our period include Phyllis Whitman Hunter’s “Transatlantic News: American Interpretations of the Scandalous and Heroic” (64-82); François Melançon’s “Print and Manuscript in French Canada under the Ancien Rgime” (83-103; “Nicholas Wrightson’s “Bookmen, Naturalists, and British Atlantic Communication, c. 1730-60” (104-27); Joyce D. Goodfriend’s “The Dutch Book Trade in Colonial New York City: The Transatlantic Connection” (128-57); James Raven’s “’Classical Transports’: Latin and Greek Texts in North and Central America before 1800” (157-86); and Michael O’Connor’s “’A Small Cargo for Tryal’: Connections between Belfast and Philadelphia Book Trades in the later Eighteenth Century” (187-211). Rev. by Rachel N. Schnepper in SHARP News, 21, no. 1 (Winter 2011), 9-10.]

Hoy, Joan McElroy. "The Publication and Distribution of Books among New England Quakers, 1775-1836." Dissertation Abstracts International, 50A, no. 6 (November 1989), 1415.

Hubbard, Eleanor. “Reading, Wriing, and Initialing: Female Literacy in Early Modern London.” Journal of British Studies, 54, no. 3 (July 201), 553-77.

Hubber, Brian. "An Eighteenth-Century English Book Club." [Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand] Bulletin, 21 (1997), 245-50; illustration of MS record on verso of title-page of The Siege of Calais: A Tragedy (London: Fletcher and Davies, 1965), recording book circulation among members living in or near Peterborough; borrowed on average for 4-7 days.]


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