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Baggerman, Arianne, and Rudolf Dekker. "Sensibilité et éducation d'un enfant a l'époque batave: Le journal intime d'Otto van Eck (1791-1796) (I)." Translated by Annie Jourdan. Annales historiques de la révolution française, no. 326 (2001), 129-39.

Bailey, Charles R. The Old Regime Collèges, 1789-1795: Local Initiatives in recasting French Second Education. New York: P. Lang, 1994. Pp. x + 292; index.

Baird, Ileana (ed.). Social Networks in the Long Eighteenth Century: Clubs, Literary Salons, Textual Coteries. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishers, 2015 [Dec. 2014]. Pp. xi + c. 368; 8 illustrations; index. [Besides the lengthy introduction by Baird (1-28), at least two of the essays belong in this section: Scott Breuninger’s “The Social Networks of the Irish Enlightenment: The Dublin Philosophical Society and the Royal Society of Dublin” (55-76); and Uriel Heyd’s “Theatrical Representations of Eighteenth-Century Celebrity and the Press” (99-120).]

Bajáki, Rita, Hajnalka Bujdosó, István Monok, and Noémi Viskolcz. Magyarorszá magánkönytarák IV. 1552-1740. (Adattár XVI-XVIII. századi szellemi mozgalmaink történetehez, 13/4.) Budapest: Országos Széchényi Könyvtár, 2009. Pp. xv + 429. [“Private Libraries in Hungary IV,” a project cataloguing private libraries and relevant to the study of readers and books. Rev. (with the 2010 volume by László Czeglédi, and others) by Robert Stohl in Magyar Könyvszemle, 127 (2011), 536-37.]

Baker, Geoff. Reading and Politics in Early Modern England: The Mental World of a Seventeenth-Century Catholic Gentleman [William Blundell]. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2010. Pp. 272. [Rev. (with another book) by Grant Tapsell in English Historical Review, 126 (2011), 1529-33.]

Baker, William, and Kenneth Womack (eds.). Pre-Nineteenth-Century Book Collectors and Bibliographers. (Dictionary of Literary Biography, 213.) Detroit: Gale, 1999. Pp. xvii + 487; bibliographies, including general bibliography by editors [417-20]; cumulative index for DLB vols. [423-87]. index. [Includes accounts of Thomas Baker, William Beckford, David Garrick, George III, Robert Harley and Edward Harley, Thomas Hearne, Samuel Johnson, John Locke, Archbishop Narcissus Marsh, Samuel Pepys, Alexander Pope, Richard and Thomas Rawlinson, John Selden, the Sotheby family, Horace Walpole, Anthony à Wood, and Sir Christopher Wren. Rev. by Janet Ing Freeman in TLS, no. 4974 (1998), 28.]

Balayé, Simone. La Bibliothèque nationale des origines à 1800. (Histoire des Idées et critique littéraire, 262.) Geneva: Droz, 1988. Pp. xv + 546; illus. [Rev. (with anr. book) by W. H. Barber in TLS (24 Nov. 1989), 1305; (fav.) by Michel Delon in Revue d'histoire littéraire de la France, 91 (1991), 106-108; by Rudolf Harneit in Wolfenbütteler Notizen zur Buchgeschichte, 16 (1991), 150-53; (with anr. book) by David McKitterick in Library, 6th ser., 12 (1990), 144-49.]

Balbi, Mathias (ed.). I Libri ebraici, greci e latini di Carlo Tancredi Falletti di Barolo. Introduction by Francesco Traniello. Florence: Olschki, 2012. Pp. 250; catalogue of an exhibition in Torino. [Marchese Barolo died in 1838. The catalogue is divided chronologically and includes 46 eighteenth-century editions. Rev. by Giancarlo Petrella in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 25 (March 2013), 9-10.]

Baldacchini, Lorenzo, and Anna Manfron (eds.). Il libro in Romagna: Produzione, commercio e consumo dalla fine del secolo XV all'età contemporanea: Convegno di studi (Cesena, 23-25 marzo 1995). (Storia della tipografia e del commercio librario, 2.) 2 vols. Florence: Olschki, 1998. Pp. xvi + 904; illus. [Rev. (briefly) by Neil Harris in Library, 7th ser., 1 (2000), 142; (fav., with another book) by Mario Pozzi in Giornale storico della letteratura italiana, 177 (2000), 319.]

Balenciaga, Pablo. “La biblioteca del arquitecto Alexo de Miranda: Un ejemplo du cultura ilustrada.” Pp. 57-72 of Vol. 3 of Ilustración, ilustraciones. 3 vols. Edited by Jesús Astigarraga Goenaga, María Victoria López-Cordón Cortezo and José María Urkia Etxabe. San Sebastián: Real Sociedad Bascongada de Amigos del País, 2009.

Balsem, Astrid C. “Collecting the Ultimate Scholar’s Library: The Bibliotheca Vossiana.” Pp. 281-309 in Isaac Vossius (1618-1689) between Science and Scholarship. (Brill Studies in Intellectual History, 214.) Edited by Eric Jorink and Dirk Van Miert. Leiden: Brill, 2012.

Baluta, Gheorghe. Scurta istorie a bibliotecilor din România. Bucharest: Enciclopedica, 2000. Pp. 238. [History of libraries in Romania. Rev. by Gabriel Zanescu in Library History, 21, no. 2 (July 2005), 138 or 138f.]

Bankert, Dabney Anderson. “Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Rawlinson c. 887: An Unpublished Seventeenth-Century Anglo-Saxon Glossary by Nathaniel Spinckes.” Library, 7th series, 13 (2012), 400-228 illustrations. [Describes the manuscript and its contents, examining the latter for the method and sources employed by Spinckes (1654-1727).]

Bannet, Eve Tavor. “History of Reading: The Long Eighteenth Century.” Literature Compass, 10 (2013), 122-33. On-line open-access journal published by Wiley: at http://literature-compass.com/18th-century/ or at Http://onlinelibrary/wiley.com/doi/10.1111/lico.2013.10.issue-2/.

Bannet, Eve Tavor. Transatlantic Stories and the History of Reading, 1720-1810: Migrant Fictions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. Pp. ix + 295. [Bannet’s examination of “histories” and fictions, tracking their adaptations and alterations as they are reprinted in different locations, offers insights in book history and the history of reading. Alterations by epitomizers of Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, Clarissa, and other canonical novels, as well as now little known narratives, are examined. Rev. (favorably) by Vincent Carretta in Scriblerian, 46, no. 1 (Autumn 2013), 59-61; by Richard Squibbs in Review of English Studies, n.s. 63 (2012), 331-33; by Brian Yothers in Journal of American Studies, 47 (2013), 451-50.]

Bannies, Volker, and Volkmar Herre. Freiberger Bücherschätze: Andreas Möller Bibliothek. Beucha: Sax-Verlag; Stralsund: Ed. Herre, 2012. Pp. 144; illus. [With related internet resource. On the private library of Freiberg University professor Andreas Möller (1598-1660).]

Bär, Gerald. “’Ossian für Frauenzimmer’: Lengefeld, Günderrode and the Portuguese Translation of ‘Alcipe’ and Adelaide Prata.” Translation and Literature, 22, no. 3 (2013), 343-60.

Baratin, Marc, and Christian Jacob (eds.). Le pouvoir des bibliothèques: La mémoire des livres en Occident. Paris: Albin Michel, 1996. Pp. 338. [Includes Roger Chartier's "Le prince, la bibliothèque, et la dédicace" (204-23); David McKitterick's "La bibliothèque comme interaction: La lecture et le langage de la bibliographie" (107-22); Jean-Marie Goulemot's "Bibliothèques, encyclopédisme et angoisses de la perte: L'exhaustivité ambigüe des Lumières" (285-98); Jacques Revel's "Entre deux mondes la bibliothèque de Gabriel Naudé" (243-50); and Salvatore Settis's "Warburg continuatus: Description d'une bibliothèque" (122-74).]

Baratz, Lewis Reece. "Les oeuvres de Joseph Hector Fiocco (1703-1741) dans la bibliothèque du chanoine Vanden Boom (1688-1769)." Études sur le XVIIIe siècle, 19 (1992), 47-78; liste des musicques ["qui apartient a Monsieur Vanden Boom, 60-68]; plates.

Barbe, Leo. "La Bibliothèque d'un médicin gascon au milieu du XVIIIe siècle." Bulletin de la Société archéologique historique littéraire et scientifique du Gers (1991), 200-13.

Barbier, Frédéric. "Entre Montesquieu et Adam Smith: Leipzig et la société des libraires." Revue française d'histoire du livre, nos. 112-13 (2001), 149-70; illus.

Barbier, Fédéric. Histoire des bibliothèques: D’Alexandrie aux bibliothèques virtuelles. (Collection U. Histoire.) Paris: Armand Colin, 2013. Pp. 301; illus. [Rev. by Enrico Pio Ardolino in Nuovi annali della scuola speciale per archivisti e bibliotecari, 28 (2014), 277-79; by Marco Callegari in L’Almanacco Bibliografico, no. 29 (March 2014), 4-5.]

Barbier, Fédéric (ed.). Histoire et civilisation du livre, 10 (for 2014). Geneva: Droz, 2014. Pp. 488; illustrations. [With the special titular focus “Oú en est l’histoire des bibliothèques?” (the title also of Barbier’s introductory essay, 7-12). Other essays include Giancarlo Petrella, “Una biblioteca nobiliare ai piedi delle Alpi: La raccolte libraria dei conti di Castel Thun tra XV e XIX secolo: Un primo squardo,” the subject of a 2015 book by Petrella (27-50); Fabienne Henryot, “Le Livre dans l’économie du don et la constitution des bibliothèques ecclésiastiques à l’époque moderne” (69-92); Antonella Barzazi, “De la bibliothèque savante à bibliothèque publique: Collections et lecteurs à Venise au XVIIIe siècle” (113-30); Magali Jacquinez, “Schoepflin et les origines de la Bibliothèque de la Ville de Strasbourg” (131-42); Maria Luísa Cabral, “La Création de la Bibliothèque royale publique de la Cour de Portugal: Une responsabilité partagée, 1796-1803” (143-62); Olga Granastói, “Diffusion du livre en français en Hongrie: Bilan et perspectives des recherches sur les bibliothèques privées de l’aristocratie (1770-1810)” (181-206); Phillipe Dufieux, “Le Rameau d’or et de science’: La Bibliothèque humaniste de l’architecte Joseph-Jean-Pascal Gay (1775-1832)” (207-28; illustrations); Ana.-Marie Bertrand, “Ce que le numérique fait à l’histoire des bibliothèques: Réflexions exploratoires” (255-65); Thierry Dubois, “La diffusion des connaissances utiles aux XVIIIe siècle: Élie Bertrand, la Société économique d’Yeardon, sa bibliothèque et son cabinet de curiosités” (375-410).]

Barbier, Frédéric. “L’Histoire, l’historien, et la lecture.” Gutenberg-Jahrbuch, 73 (1998), 264-85.

Barbier, Frédéric, Annie Parent-Charon, François Dupuigrenet Desroussilles, Claude Jolly, and Dominique Varry (eds.). Le Livre et l'historien: Études offertes en l'honneur du Professeur Henri-Jean Martin. (Histoire et civilisation du livre, VI: 24.) Geneva: Droz, 1997. Pp. xvii + 817 + [7]; index. [Most essays concern the history of the book and of publishing, but some essays are relevant here: François Lesure’s “L’Edition musicale en France au XVIIIe siècle: Etat des questions” (229-34); Louis Desgraves's "Les Catalogues des libraires bordelais au XVIIIe siècle" (319-26); Françoise Bléchet’s “Le Quotidien et l’insolite à la Bibliotheque du Roi au temps de l’Abbé Bignon [1662-1743]” (359-70); Françoise Waquet’s “La Communication des livres dans les bibliothèques d’Ancien Régime” (371-80); Hans-Erich Bödecker's "The Invisible Commerce of Hearts and Minds: Authors, the Literary Market, and the Public in Eighteenth-Century Germany" (583-612); and Hans-Jürgen Lüsebrink and Rolf Reichardt's "L'univers livresque d'un philosophe allemand: Libraires, livres et lectures de George Forster" (613-46); and Agnés Marcetteau-Paul’s “Lectures nantaises de la Révolution” (667-78). Rev. (fav., with a good overview of contents) by Robert L. Dawson in Libraries and Culture, 33 (1998), 212-14; (with another book) by Yann Sordet in Bulletin du bibliophile (1998), 193-95.]

Barbier, Frédéric, Sabine Juratic, and Dominique Varry (eds.). L'Europe et le livre: Réseaux et pratiques du négoce de librairie XVI-XVIIIe siècles. (Cahiers d'histoire du livre, 1.) Paris: Klincksieck, 1996. Pp. 655; illus.; index. [Includes Hans Erich Bödeker's "Der Buchhandel in Münster in des zweiten Hälfe des 18. Jahrhunderts" (485-526); Roger Chartier's "La librairie d'Ancien Régime" (587-609); Mark Lehmstedt's "Die Herausbildung des Kommissionsbuchhandels in Deutschland im 18. Jahrhundert" (451-83).]

Barbier, Frédéric, and István Monok (eds.). Contribution à l’histoire intellectuelle de l’Europe. Réseaux du livre, réseaux des lecteurs. (L’Europe de la culture écrite 1650-1918, 4) Budapest: Orzgos Széchényi Könyvtár, 2008. Pp. 238; illustrations. Includes Juliett Guilbaud’s “Das jansenistiche Europa und das Buch im 17. und 18.Jahrhundert” (49-61); Claire Madl’s “Réseaux savants, réseaux de livres en Bohëme autour de 1800” (165-89); István Monok’s “ Patrimoine en lecture: Tradition et renouvellement dans l’histoire de la réception des idées européennes en Hongrie et en Transylvaine” (109-21); Radu G. Paun’s “Réseaux de livres et réseaux de pouvoirs dans le sud-est de l’Europe: Le monde des drogmans (XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles)” (63-107). Rev. by Luca Rivali in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 11 (September 2009), 21.]

Barbieri, Edoardo, and Federico Gallo (eds.). Claustrum et armarium: Studi su alcune biblioteche ecclesiastiche italiane tra medioevo ed età moderna. (Accademia Ambrosiana, classe di studi borromaici, 12.) Milan: Biblioteca Ambrosiana; Rome: Bulzoni, 2010. Pp. 334; illus. [Includes Ugo Rozzo’s “Le biblioteche dei seminari: Un grande patrimonio bibliografico da conoscere e valorizzare” (255-74). Rev. by Rudj Gorian in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 18 (June 2011), 5-6; by Natale Vacalebre in Biblioteche Oggi, 30, no. 4 (2012), 68-71.]

Barbieri, Edoardo, and Danilo Zardin (eds.). Libri, biblioteche e cultura nell'Italia del Cinque e Seicento. (Storia Recerche.) With essays by Barbieri, Roberto Rusconi, G. Petrella, S. Biombi, M. Colombo, E. Ardissino, D. Gomarasca, and others. Milan: Vita e Pensiero; Largo A. Gemmelli, 2002. Pp. x + 460; index.

Barbieri, Francesco, and Marina Zuccolo. "La Libreria di Geminiano Rondelli donata alla Biblioteca dell'Istituto delle Scienze di Bologna." Schede Umanistiche: Rivista semestrale dell'Archivio Umanistico Rinascimentale Bolognese (1994) 165-230; illus.

Barchas, Janine, with Gordon D. Fulton. The Annotations in Lady Bradshaigh’s Copy of Clarissa. (ELS Monograph Series, 74.) Victoria, British Columbia: U. of Victoria, 1998. Pp. 144. [Barchas studies not on a reader’s annoations to Samuel Richardson’s novel but Richardson’s own annotations to Bradshaigh’s comments and to the text. Rev. (fav.) by Kevin L. Cope in 1650-1850, 6 (2001), 391-93.]

Barenbaum, I. E. "La Bibliophile en Russie." Bulletin du bibliophile (1995), 67-90; bibliography [87-90]; summary [in English, 86].

Barenne, Odette. "La Bibliothèque de la Société de Port-Royal." Mélanges de la Bibliothèque de la Sorbonne, 11 (1991), 143-50.

Barker, Nicolas. “[Review essay:] American Libraries.” Book Collector, 56 (2007), 311-12, 315-20, 323-24, 327.

Barker, Nicolas. “The Bishop Phillpotts Library, Truro [Cornwall].” Book Collector, 56 (2007), 493-500.[Established for Cornwall clergy in 1866 and still in use.]

Barker, Nicolas. “Books for Beginners” [review essay on David Pearson’s Books as History]. Book Collector, 58 (2009), 323-24, 327-30, 333-34.

Barker, Nicolas. The Devonshire Inheritance: Five Centuries of Collecting at Chatsworth. Foreword by A. R. B. Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire. Essay by Diana Scarisbrick. Alexandria, VA: Art Services International, 2003. Pp. 431; exhibition catalogue; illus. (chiefly colored); maps.

Barker, Nicolas. “The History of Libraries in Britain.” Book Collector, 58 (2009), 11-12, 15-18, 21-24, 27-28. [Review essay of Cambridge History of Libraries, ed. by Hoare (2006).]

Barker, Nicolas. Horace Walpole’s Description of the Villa at Strawberry Hill: A Facsimile of the Copy Extra-Illustrated for Charles Bedford in the Collection of Lord Waldegrave of North Hill. London: Roxburghe Club, 2010. Pp. 214 [328, with facsimiles].

Barker, Nicolas. "The Library Catalogue of Laurence Sterne." The Shandean, 1 (1989), 8-24.

[Barker, Nicolas.] "Marginalia [Rev. essay of Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books by H. J. Jackson (Yale U. P., 2001)]." Book Collector, 52 (2003), 11-30.

Barker, Nicolas (ed.). Pleasures of Bibliophily: Fifty Years of The Book Collector: An Anthology. Foreword by A. S. G. Edwards. London: British Library; New Castle: Oak Knoll, 2003. Pp. 320; 50 illus. [Rev. by Robert Dawson in Libraries and Culture, 40 (2005), 194-97; by John Feather in Journal of the Printing Historical Society, n.s. 6 (2003), 58-59; (with another book) by Anthony Hobson in Library, 7th ser., 5 (2004), 73-75; by David Pearson in SHARP News, 14, nos. 1-2 (2005), 10; by James Raven in Book Collector, 53 (2004), 309-10; by Colin Steele in Biblionews, 28 (2003), 152-53; (with another book) by H. R. Woudhuysen in TLS (May 16, 2003), 28.]

Barker, Nicolas. "The Sale of the Evelyn Library, 1977-8." The Book Collector, 44 (1995), 210-17.

Barker, Nicolas (comp.). Treasures from the Libraries of National Trust Houses. New York: Royal Oak Foundation and Grolier Club, 1999. Pp. 181; index; photographs. [Exhibition catalogue with essays by Barker on "The Rise and Fall of the Country House Library (1-11) and Simon Jervis on "The English Country House Library" (12-33).]

Barker, Nicolas, Michael Hunter, and Theodore Hoffmann, et al. John Evelyn in the British Library. London: British Library, 1995. Pp. 102; bibliography [alphabetical list of Evelyn's books]. [A separate reprinting of three essays appearing in The Book Collector, Vol. 44, no. 2 (1995): Theodore Hoffmann and Joan Winterkorn of Quaritch and Frances Harris and Hilton Kelliher of the BL provide an inventory of the Evelyn archive recently acquired by the BL; Barker recounts the 1997-1998 sale of the Evelyn Library, and Michael Hunter describes Evelyn's library.]

Barker-Benfield, G. J. Abigail and John Adams: The Americanization of Sensibility. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010. Pp. 501. [Extended examination of the reading by the Adams family and their circle. Rev. in a review essay (“Early America in Transatlantic Context{s}”) by Mark K. Fulk in Eighteenth-Century Studies, 35 (2012), 299-303.]

Barlow, Derek. On the Transition from Book Labels to Book Plates amongst the Circulating Libraries and the Booksellers in Later Eighteenth-Century Newcastle-on-Tyne. Oldham: Incline Press, 2002. Pp. 14 + 1 leave of plates; maps.

Barlow, William P. “On the Private Collecting of Book Catalogues.” Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 102 (2008), 547-55.

Barnadas, Josep M. (ed.). El Libro, espejo de la cultura: Estudios sobre la cultura del libro en Bolivia: Dedicados a Werner Guttentag en su septuegésimo aniversario. Cochabamba, La Paz: Editorial "Los Amigos del Libro," 1990. Pp. 187.

Barnard, Teresa (ed.). British Women and the Intellectual World in the Long Eighteenth-Century. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014. Pp xix + 194. Includes essays addressing Anna Barbauld, Elizabeth Inchbald, Joanna Baillie, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Elizabeth Percy.]

Barnard, Toby. “Bishop Stearne’s Collection of Books and Manuscripts.” Pp 185-202 of Marsh’s Library—A Mirror on the World: Love, Learning, and Libraries, 1650-1750. Edited by Muriel McCarthy and Ann Simmons. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2009. Pp. 311; illus.; maps.

Barnard, Toby. "Children and Books in Eighteenth-Century Ireland." Pp. 213-38 in That Woman--Studies in Irish Bibliography: A Festschrift for Mary "Paul" Pollard. Edited by Charles Benson and Siobhan Fitzpatrick. Forward by Maurice Craig; Introduction by Charles Benson. Dublin: Library Association of Ireland Rare Books Group and the Lilliput Press, 2005. Pp. xv + 310; bibliography of publications by Pollard [287-89]; illustrations; index.

Barnard, Toby. "Gathering Ideas: A Clerical Library in County Cork, 1744." In Print Culture and Intellectual Life in Ireland, 1669-1941. Edited by Martin Fanning and Raymond Gillespie. Dublin: Woodfield Press, 2006. Pp. 288.

Barnard, Toby. “Learning, the Learned, and Literacy in Ireland, c. 1660-1760.” Pp. 209-35 of “A Miracle of Learning”: Studies in Manuscripts and Irish Learning: Essays in Honour of William O’Sullivan. Edited by Toby Barnard, Dábhi Ó Crónin, and Katharine Simms. Aldershot: Ashgate, 1998. Pp. xiv + 303.

Barnard, Toby. “Libraries and Collectors, 1700-1800.” Pp. 111-34 of The Oxford History of the Irish Book. Vol. 3: The Irish Book in English, 1550-1800. Edited by Raymond Gillespie and Andrew Hadfield. Oxford: Oxford U. Press, 2006. Pp. xxi + 477; bibliography; illus.; index.

Barnard, Toby. “On Subscription” [review essay]. Times Literary Supplement (28 September 2012), 13.

Barnard, Toby. “Strolabella (1740) and the Varieties of Print in Provincial Ireland.” Irish University Review, 41, no. 1 (2011), 54-62; summary in English. [In a special issue on “Irish Fiction, 1660-1830.” Barnard discusses print culture in provincial Ireland by starting with the discovery at Harvard of the sole extant copy of Strolabella (Cork: George Harrison, 1740), an anonymous fictional narrative about the exploits of travelling actors. The issue was separately issued in book form by ]

Barnett, Graham Keith. Histoire des bibliothèques publique en France de la Revolution à 1939. Paris: Promodis, 1987. Pp. 406.

Barney, Richard A. “Pedagogical Plots: On the Beginnings of the Novel of Education in Early Eighteenth-Century England.” Ph.D. dissertation, U. of Virginia, 1992. Dissertation Abstracts International, 53A, no. 3 (1992), 814-15.

Barney, Richard A. Plots of Enlightenment: Education and the Novel in Eighteenth-Century England. Stanford: Stanford U. Press, 1999. Pp. xii + 402.

Baron, Robert C., and Conrad Edick Wright (eds.). The Libraries, Leadership, & Legacy of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. Golden, CO: Fulcrum Publishing in association with the Massachusetts Historical Society, 2010. Pp. xxvi + 294. [Rev. (favorably) by Mark G. Spencer in The Library, 7th series, 12 (2011), 432-33.]

Baron, Sabrina Alcorn, with Elizabeth Walsh and Susan Scola (eds.). The Reader Revealed. Washington, DC: Folger Shakespeare Library (distributed through Seattle, WA: U. of Washington Press), 2001. Pp. 158; bibliography [192-57]; exhibition catalogue [93-151]; illus. [The catalogue is preceded by Steven N. Zwicker's "The Reader Revealed" (11-18), Baron's "Red Ink and Black Letter: Reading Early Modern Authority" (19-30), Kevin Sharpe's "Uncommonplaces? Sir William Drake's Reading Notes" (59-66), Anna Battigelli's "'To Conclude Aright within Ourselves': Narcissus Luttrell and the Burden of Protestant Readers, 1678-88" (75-84), William H. Sherman's "'Rather soiled by use': Renaissance Readers and Modern Collectors," and essays by Anthony Grafton, Arthur Marotti, and Evelyn R. Tribble involving Renaissance texts. Rev. by T. H. Howard-Hill in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 96 (2002), 459.]

Barr, C. B. L., and W. G. Day. "Sterne and the York Minster Library." The Shandean, 2 (1990), 8-21.

Barran, Thomas. Russia Reads Rousseau, 1762-1825. (Studies in Russian Literature and Theory.) Evanston: Northwestern U. Press, 2002. Pp. xxvi + 404; index. [Rev. (fav.) by Tanguy L'Aminot in Revue d'histoire littéraire de la France, 104 (2004), 703.]

Barrière, Didier. "Mais que faisait done le bibliothécaire Charles Nodier à l'Arsenal?" Bulletin du bibliophile (2000), 286-318; summary in English [319].

Barrio Moya, José Luis. "La Biblioteca y las colecciones arísticas del rodense don Fernando de la Encina, canónigo de la Catedra de Cuenca, 1740." Al-Basit, 18 (1986), 121-53.

Barrio Moya, José Luis. "La Libreria del obispo José González Diáz de Villalobos." Hispania sacra, 43 (1991), 329-41.

Barry, Jonathan. "Literacy and Literature in Popular Culture: Reading and Writing in Historical Perspective." Pp. 69-94 in Popular Culture in England, c. 1500-1850. Edited by Tim Harris. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995.


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