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Powitz, Gerhardt. Die Bibliothek des Franziskanerklosters in Frankfurt am Main: Kirchliches und städtisches Bibliothekswesen im Übergang vom Mittelalter zur Neuzeit. (Frankfurter Bibliotheksschriften, 5.) Frankfurt am Main: Klostermann, 1997. Pp. 149; illus. (some in color); index.

Pozzo, Annette. Membra disiecta: Inhalt und Wirkung der Bibliothek des Göttinger Professors Lüder Kulenkamp (1724-1794). (Berliner Arbeiten zur Bibliotheks- und Informationswissenschaft, 25.) Berlin: Logos, 2014. Pp. 292. [This library held roughly 9000 manuscripts. Infomation is drawn from a 1794 sale catalogue. Rev. (briefly, favorably) by Alessandro Ledda in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 32 (December 2014), 23.]

Price, Leah. "Reading (and Not Reading) Richardson, 1756-1868." Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 29 (2000), 87-104.

Price, Leah. "Reading: The State of the Discipline." Book History, 7 (2004), 303-20.

Proot, Goran. “Gebruikssporen in programmaboekjes voor het collegetoneel van de jezuïeten in de Provincia Flandro-Belgica (1575-1773).” Jaarboek voor Nederlandse Boekgeschiedenis, 15 (2008), 71-91.

Pröve, Ralf, and Norbert Winnige (eds.). Wissen ist Macht: Herrschaft und Kommunikation in Brandenburg-Preussen, 1600-1850. Berlin: Berlin Verlag; Arno Spitz GmbH, 2001. Pp. 256. [On print culture, treating the means and impact of communication in varied forms, touching on mail service, literacy and the like. Rev. (fav.) by Loyd D. Lee in Central European History, 37 (2004), 438-40.

Prunai Falciani, Maria (ed.). Biblioteca Marucelliana, Firenze. (Le grandi biblioteche d'Italia.) Fiesole: Nardini, 1999. Pp. 235; illustrations. [Rev. (fav.; with anr. book) by Alberto Petrucciani in La Bibliofilía, 105 (2003), 311-14, noting this is not a coffee-table book but stimulating original research on the library's history (founded 1752). With contributions by roughly a dozen scholars.]

Prungnaud, Joëlle. "La traduction du roman gothique anglais en France au tournant du XVIIIe siècle." TTR: Traduction, Terminologie, Rédaction: Études sur le texte et ses transformations, 7 (1994), 11-46; summary in English.

Puga, Rogério Miguel. “The First English Language Library in China: The English Factory Library (Canton-Macao, 1806-1835).” Notes and Queries, n.s. 61 [259] (2014), 508-09.

Purcell, Mark. The Big House Library in Ireland: Books in Ulster Country Houses. London: National Trust, 2011. Pp. 128; illustrations. [[Purcell focuses on six large private libraries, the grandest of which is said to be Mount Stewart, home of the Marquesses of Londonderry and Viscounts Castlereagh. There are a thin fraction of the libraries that existed over a hundred years ago. He reveals how, in part due to the National Trust, there are far more private libraries extant in Northern Ireland than in Ireland. Rev. (favorably) by Robert Harding in Book Collector, 61 (2012), 311-12.]

Purcell, Mark. "Books and Readers in Eighteenth-Century Westmoreland: The Brownes of Townend." Library History, 17, no. 2 ([July] 2001), 91-109. [National Trust acquired Townend in Troutbeck in the Lake District; its library was acquired by middle class provincial yeoman for 400 years.]

Purcell, Mark. "The Country House Library Reassess'd; or, Did the 'Country House Library' Ever Really Exist?" Library History, 18, no. 3 (2002), 157-74.

Purcell, Mark. "The Library at Ham House: National Trust Libraries 2." Book Collector, 55 (2006), 509-24; illus.

Purcell, Mark. "The Library at Lanhydrock: National Trust Libraries 1." Book Collector, 54 (2005), 195-230; 3 plates. [This private library is south of Bodmin in Cornwall, in a 17C great house of the Robartes family. Purcell surveys the collections' development and then analyzes its strengths (it is the working library of scholar-gentlemen not given to bibliophilic excesses but it has rarities).]

Purcell, Mark. "'A Lunatick of unsound mind': Edward, Lord Leigh (1742-86), and the Refounding of Oriel College Library." Bodleian Library Record, 17, nos. 3-4 (April-October 2001), 246-60; illus. [Part of a collection on "Cultures of Collecting in Oxford Libraries and Beyond," with an introduction by Kate Bennett.]

Purcell, Mark. "The Private Library in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Surrey." Library History, 19, no. 2 (2003), 119-27.

Purcell, Mark. "'Useful Weapons for the Defence of that Cause': Richard Allestree, John Fell, and the Foundation of the Allestree Library." Library, 6th ser., 21 (1999), 124-47. [On the historic library of the Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford, founded by Allestree (1619-1681) in 1681.]

Purcell, Mark, and James Fishwick. “The Library at Ickworth: National Trust Libraries 6.” Book Collector, 61 (2012), 366-90; illustrations. [The family library of the Hervey family, including that of John Lord Hervey (1696-1743) and his wife Molly Lepell (1706-1768) and generations before and after.]

Purcell, Mark, David Pearson, and William Hale. Treasures from the Library of the 1st Lord Fairhaven at Anglesey Abbey. Edited by Oliver Garnett. London: Scala; Swindon: National Trust, 2013. Illustrations; index. [Huttleston Broughton, 1st Baron Fairhaven, 1896-1966, collected fine rare books from diverse fields: architecture, botany, costume (often in historic bindings).]

Pusztai, Gabor, and Réka Bozzay (eds.). Debrecentol Amszterdamig. Magyarország és Németalföld kapcsolata [From Debrecen to Amsterdam: Cultural relations between Hungary and the Low Countries]. Debrecen: Néderlandisztikai Tanszék, 2010. Pp. 424. [Includes various articles on cultural transfer between the regions, as Orsolya Réthelyi’s on Maria Hapsburg and the question of cultural transfer (25-44). Rev. by Katalin s. Németh in Magyar Könyvszemle, 127 (2011), 407-10.]

Quadranti, Isolde. La Biblioteca di Casa Pindemonte e i libri di Ippolito: Studio bibliografico filologico. 2 vols. Verona: Bonato, 2009. Pp. xiv + 306; vi + 528.

Quadrara, Massimiliano. “Legature e lettori nel Marcolini editore e tipografo.” Pp. 451-59 in Un giardino per le art: Francesco Marcolino da Forli: La vita, l’opera, il catalogoi. Atti del convegno internazionale di studi, Forli, 11-13 ottobre 2007. Edited Paolo Procaccioli, Paolo Temeroli, and Vanni Tesei. Bologna: Editrice Compsitori, 2009. Pp. 503.

Quarg, Gunter. "Ganz Köln steckt voller Bücherschätze": Von der Ratsbibliothek zur Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek, 1602-2002: Austellung und Katalog. (Schriften der Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek Köln, 11.) Cologne: Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek, 2002. Pp. 295; illus. (chiefly in color); bibliography. [In conjunction with a 2002 exhibition, this book records exhibitions and surveys the library's evolution and acquisitions (from 1602). Rev. by Peter Vodosek in Library History, 19 (2003), 149-50; Rev. (with another book in the review essay "Historische Sammlungen in der Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek Köln") by Bettina Wagner in Aus dem Antiquariat (2005), 154-56.]

Quarrie, Paul. "The Scientific Library of the Earls of Macclesfield." Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 60, no. 1 (January 2006), 5-24. [Quarrie surveys a series of six sales at Sotheby’s London running from March 2004 to November 2005; the tenth sale occurred at Sotheby’s 30 October 2007.]

Quéniart, Jean. "Les bibliothèques ecclésiastiques à Rennes au XVIIIe siècle." Revue d'histoire de l'Egalise de France, 83 (1997), 203-14.

Quevedo Hernández, Roberto. Aproximaciones a la historia de las bibliotecas públicas en Aguascalientes. Aguascalientes, Mexico: Gobierno del Estato, Instituto Cultural de Aguascalientes, 1993. Pp. 85; illustrations.

Quilitzsch, Uwe. “Die Bibliothek im Wörlitz Schloss.” Pp. 53-76 of Bücherwelten im Gartenreich Dessau-Wörlitz. Edited by Wilhelm Haefs. Hannover: Wehrhahn, 2009. Pp. 168; 25 illustrations.

Quinn, Mary Ellen. Historical Dictionary of Librarianship. (Historical Dictionaries of Professions and Industries.) Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. Pp. xliv + 319. [An encyclopedia of persons and terms for the most part. Rev. by Karen Attar in Library & Information History, 31 (2015), 59-60; by David H. Michels in Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science, 38, no. 4 (December 2014), R1-R2.]

Quintanilla, Ana Isabel. "La biblioteca de Pedro José Pérez Valiente." Cuadernos de Historia Moderna, 24 (2000), 137-66.

Raabe, Mechthild. Die fürstliche Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel und ihre Leser: Zur Geschichte des institutionellen Lesens in einer norddeutschen Residenz 1664-1806. Wolfenbüttel: Fritz-Steuber-GmbH, 1997. Pp. x + 232; illus.; index. [Discusses the institution's history with attention to patrons, scholars, and, especially, librarians (David Hanisius, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Lorenz Hertel, Lessing, et al.), covering also operations like cataloguing and loaning of books.]

Raabe, Mechthild (comp.). Leser und Lektüre im 18. Jahrhundert: Die Ausleihbücher der Herzog August-Biliothek Wolfenbüttel (1714-1799). Vol. 1: Die Leser und ihre Lektüre; Vol. 2: Die sozialen Lesergruppen und ihre Lektüre; Vol. 3: Alphabetisches Verzeichnis der entliehenen Bücher; Vol. 4: Systematisches Verzeichnis der entliehenen Bücher. Forward by Paul Raabe. 4 vols. Munich and New York: K. G. Saur, 1989. Bibliography [Vol. 1, xcii-xciv]; illus. [Rev. (favorably) by Bärbel Raschke in Leipziger Jahrbuch zur Buchgeschichte, 1 (1991), 324-27; by Marianne Rumpf in Zeitschrift für Bibliothekswesen und Bibliographie, 38 (1991), 471-73.]

Raabe, Mechthild. Leser und Lektüre in der Fürstlichen Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel 1664-1713. (Lectura, 2.) Szeged: Scriptum, 1997. Pp. 18.

Raabe, Mechthild (ed.). Leser und Lektüre vom 17. zu 19. Jahrhundert: Die Ausleihbücher der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel, 1664-1806. Foreword by Paul Raabe. Three series [A-C] in 8 vols. Vols. 1-2, or T.A: Leser und Lektüre im 17. Jahrhundert: Die Ausleihbücher der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel 1664-1713 (1998): Vol. 1: Leser und Lektüre. Lesergruppen und Lektüre; 2: Alphabetisches und systematisches Verzeichnis der entliehenen Bücher; Vols. 3-6, or T.B.: Leser und Lektüre vom 18. Jahrhundert: Die Ausleihbücher . . . 1714-1799 (1989): Vol 1. [5th vol. in the series]: Die Leser und ihre Lektüre; 2: Die sozialen Lesergruppen und ihre Lektüre; 3: Alphabetisches Verzeichnis der entliehenen Bücher; 4: Systematisches Verzeichnis der entliehenen Bücher (1998): Vols. 7-8, or T.C.: Leser und Lektüre vom 17. zum 19. Jahrhundert. Ergänzungen und Zusammenfrassungen. Vol. 1 [7th in the series]: Leser und Lektüre 1800-1806. Chronologisches Verzeichnis 1664-1719. Vol. 2: Chronologisches Verzeichnis 1720-1806. Gesamtstatistik. Munich: K. G. Saur, 1989-1998. Bibliography and index. Pp. [T.A.:] 592; illus; 558; bibliography; index; tables; [T.B.:] xcvi + 533; map; tables; xi + 714; figures; 616; figures; graphs; tables; xi + 664; [T.C.:] 572; [viii] + 573-1171. [Vols. 1-4 (1989) were reviewed (fav.) by Bärbel Raschke in Leipziger Jahrbuch zur Buchgeschichte, 1 (1991), 324-27.]

Raabe, M[echthild]. "Leser und Leserinnen der Herzoglichen Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel 1760 bis 1780." Wolfenbütteler Beiträge, 9 (1994), 219-36.

Raabe, Paul. "Gelehrtenbibliotheken im Zeitalter der Aufklärung." In Die Wissenschaftskultur der Aufklärung. Edited by Reinhard Mocek. Halle-Wittenberg: Martin-Luther-Universität, 1990. Pp. 202. Raabe, Paul. Tradition und Innovation: Studien und Anmerkungen zur Bibliotheksgeschichte. Afterword by Georg Ruppelt (287-92). Frankfurt am Main: V. Klostermann, 2013. Pp. 306; name index. [Chapters of the volume relevant to the long 18th century include “Library History and the History of the Books: Two Fields of Research for Librarians” (11-24); “Die Bibliotheca Crummingiana in Emden” (25-46); Die Bibliotheca Conringiana: Beschreibung einer Gelehrtenbibliothek des 17. Jahrhunderts” (47-68); “Bibliothekskataloge als buchgeschichtliche Quellen” (69-90); “Bibliotheken und gelehrtes Buchwesen: Bemerkungen über Büchersammlungen der Gelehrten im 17. Jahrhundert” (91-110); “Gelehrtenbibliotheken im Zeitalter der Aufklärung” (111-28); “Bibliotheksgeschichte und historische Leserforschung: Anmerkungen zu einem Forschungsthema” (129-40”; “Goethe als Bibliotheksreformer” (143-63); “Revolutionsschriften in Weimar” (163-70); Das acht Weltwunder: Über den Ruhm der Herzog August Bibliothek” (171-92); “Besucher, Leser, und Gelehrte: Betrachtungen über die Wolfenbütteler Bibliothek im 18. Jahrhundert” (193-208); “Lessings Bucherwerbungen: Ein Überblick” (209-26); and “Der Bibliotheksdiener im 18 Jahrhundert” (227-38). ]

Raabe, Paul. Tradition und Innovation: Studien und Anmerkungen zur Bibliotheksgeschichte. Afterword by Georg Ruppelt (287-92). Frankfurt am Main: V. Klostermann, 2013. Pp. 306; name index. [Chapters of the volume relevant to the long 18th century include “Library History and the History of the Books: Two Fields of Research for Librarians” (11-24); “Die Bibliotheca Crummingiana in Emden” (25-46); Die Bibliotheca Conringiana: Beschreibung einer Gelehrtenbibliothek des 17. Jahrhunderts” (47-68); “Bibliothekskataloge als buchgeschichtliche Quellen” (69-90); “Bibliotheken und gelehrtes Buchwesen: Bemerkungen über Büchersammlungen der Gelehrten im 17. Jahrhundert” (91-110); “Gelehrtenbibliotheken im Zeitalter der Aufklärung” (111-28); “Bibliotheksgeschichte und historische Leserforschung: Anmerkungen zu einem Forschungsthema” (129-40”; “Goethe als Bibliotheksreformer” (143-63); “Revolutionsschriften in Weimar” (163-70); Das acht Weltwunder: Über den Ruhm der Herzog August Bibliothek” (171-92); “Besucher, Leser, und Gelehrte: Betrachtungen über die Wolfenbütteler Bibliothek im 18. Jahrhundert” (193-208); “Lessings Bucherwerbungen: Ein Überblick” (209-26); and “Der Bibliotheksdiener im 18 Jahrhundert” (227-38). ]

Raabe, Paul, and Barbara Strutz. Lessings Bucherwerbungen: Verzeichnis der in der Herzoglichen Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel angeschafften Bücher und Zeitschriften, 1770-1781. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2004. Pp. 374. [On Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's acquisitions while librarian. Rev. (briefly; fav.) by John L. Flood in Library, 7th series, 6 (2005), 223; in Das achtzehnte Jahrhundert, 29 (2005), 280-81.]

Ract-Madoux, Pascal. “Deux grands amateurs de littérature française identifiés: Le Marquis de la Vieuville et le marquis de Cal.” Revue d’histoire Littéraire de la France, 115, no. 1 (2015), `103-14. [In a special issue on “Bibliophilie, collectionnisme et littérature française,” with an introduction by Gabriel de Broglie and with François Moureau’s lead essay “De la bibliophilie à l’histoire littéraire” (5-20).]

Radlmaier, Dominik. "Die Bibliothek des Gratianus Tucher von Simmelsdorf und Winterstein: Eine Rekonstruktion." Wolfenbütteler Notizen zur Buchgeschichte, 22 (1997), 122-33.

Radlmaier, Dominik. "Die Bibliothek des Gratianus Tucher von Simmelsdorf und Winterstein (1617-1693). Nürnberger Mitteilungen, 83 (1996), 65-143; illus.

Radner, Joan Newlon. “’The speaking eye and the listening ear’: Orality, Literacy, and Manuscript Traditions in Northern England Villages.” Pp. 175-99 in Cultural Narratives: Textuality and Performance in American Culture before 1900. Edited by Sandra M. Gustafson and Caroline F. Sloat. Notre Dame, IN: Notre Dame U. Press, 2010. Pp. vi + 393.

Ragionieri, Delia. “’E ne terrà esatto catalogo: Una prima indagine sui cataloghi non più in uso delle Biblioteca dell’Accademia della Crusca.” Pp. 745-60 (with illustrations) in“Books seem to me to be pestilent things”: Studi in onore di Piero Innocenti per i suoi 65 anni. Edited by Cristina Cavallaro and Varo A. Vecchiarelli. 4 vols. Manziana (Rome): Vecchiarelli, 2011. Pp. xxvii + 1448.

Ramírez Leyva, Elsa Margarita. Historia de las bibliotecas en Chihuahua. Mexico, D. F.: Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes, Dirección General de Bibliotecas, 1992. Pp. 110; illustrations. [The first 18 volumes in this series are listed under the series title Historia de las bibliotecas en los estados de la República Mexicana in ECCB, n.s. 19 (for 1993).]

Ramírez Leyva, Elsa M. El libro y la lectura en el proceso de occidentalización de México. Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2001. Pp. xv + 178. [Focused on the period before 1700.]

Ramos, Gabriella, and Yanna Yannakakis (eds.). Indigenous Intellectuals: Knowledge, Power, and Colonial Culture in Mexico and the Andes. Durham: Duke U. Press, 2014. Pp. xviii + 323. [Rev. by David Távarez in Colonial Latin American Review, 24, no. 2 (2015), 277-79.]

Ramos Santana, Alberto. “El valor de la lectura.” Cuadernos de Ilustración y Romanticismo, 6 (1998), 63-71. [Cautious advice about overestimating the importance of newspapers in socio-political development, with discussions of illiteracy rates and the costs of producing and purchasing newspapers, offering some specific figures for circulation and costs. In an annual volume with the special focus and title “El libro y el lector.” Articles in this journal, 1991-2014, published by the University of Cádiz, are available as PDFs from contents tables at its website, revistas.uca.es/index/cir/issue/.]

Ramsay, Nigel. "The [Canterbury] Cathedral Archives and Library." In The History of Canterbury Cathedral. Edited by Patrick Collins, Nigel Ramsay, and Mary Sparks. New York and Oxford: Oxford U. Press, 1995. Pp. xxii + 602 + [68] of plates (some in color); maps.

Ramsay, Nigel. "English Book Collectors and the Salerooms in the Eighteenth Century.” Pp. 89-110 of Under the Hammer: Book Auctions since the Seventeenth Century. (Publishing Pathways.) Edited by Robin Meyers, Michael Harris, and Giles Mandelbrote. London: BL; New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll, 2001. Pp. xiv + 242.

Ramsay, Nigel. "The Library and Archives to 1897." In St. Paul's: The Cathedral Church of London, 604-2004. Edited by Derek Keene, Arthur Burns, and Andrew Saint. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004. Pp. xiii + 538; illus. (chiefly colored); maps (colored).

Rappaport, Joanne, and Tom Cummins. Beyond the Lettered City: Indigenous Literacies in the Andes. Durham: Duke University Press, 2011. Pp. 392; 2 charts; 67 illustrations (including 9 colored plates). [On the imposition of alphabetic and visual literacy (a new symbol system) on people of the northern Andes and their responses, including efforts to subvert such. Rev. by Rachel Sarah O’Toole in Colonial Latin American Review, 22 (2013), 450-51.]

Rasch, Rudolf (ed.). The Circulation of Music in Europe, 1600-1900: A Collection of Essays and Case Studies. (Musical Life in Europe 1600-1900, 2.) Berlin: Berliner Wissenschafts-verlag, 2008. P0p. xii + 347; illustrations; index; music.[Among the many essays are, under the heading “Countries and Cities”: Antonio Ezquerro Esteban, Luis A. Gonzalez-Marin, and Jose Vicente Gonzalez-Valle’s “The Circulation of Music in Spain, 1600-1900”; Rosamond McGuinness’s “External and Internal Factors in the Circulation of Music in London around 1700”; Ute Schwab’s “Georg Christian Apel’s Music-Lending Library in Early Nineteenth-Century Kiel”; Olivia Wahnon de Oliveira’s “Henry Vanhulst: Publishing and Selling Music in Eighteenth-Century Liege”; Rupert Ridgewell’s “Mozart’s Music on Sale in Vienna and Paris, 1780-1790”; Luca Aversano’s “The Transmission of Italian Music Articles through Germany and Austria to Eastern Europe around 1800”; and under the grouping “Repertoires and Reception”: Greger Andersson’s “Music from Abroad in Eighteenth-Century Sweden”; Katalin Kim Szacvai’s “Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century Hungarian Ecclesiastical Repertoires”; Jens Henrik Koudal’s “Musical Life in Odense from 1770 to 1800 and the Music Collection of Johan Jacob Rebach”; Marc Heilbron-Ferrer’s “Italian Theatre Music Preserved in Spanish Ecclesiastical Archives; Rudolf Rasch’s “Assimilations and Appropriations: Northern Changes to Southern Music: Seventeenth-Century Dutch Adaptations of French and Italian Music”; Francesco Bascialli’s “Italian Translations and Adaptations of French ‘Operas-Comiques’: The Case of the Archducal Theatre of Monza 1787-1795.”]

Raschke, Bärbel. "Privatbibliothek und Lektüre der Fürstin Luise von Anhalt-Dessau." Das achtzehnte Jahrhundert, 29 (2005), 2006-17. [Raschke finds that the Princess read about 20 works in each of 1801, 1802, 1808, and 1809, some of multiple volumes, and many concerning religion and travel; she read both German and French literature by contemporaries. Her library was comparable to other princesses' of the period. See also in this issue York-Gothart Mix's article on her association with artists and scholars ("Literatur als Lebensführungsmacht: Die literaturbegeisterte Frau am Hofe zwischen sozialem Distinktionsbedürfnis und empfindsamem Eskapismus" {29: 181-89}).]

Rasmussen, Birgit. Queequeg’s Coffin: Indigenous Literacies and Early American Literature. Durham: Duke University Press, 2012. Pp. 224. [Rev. by Joanna Brooks in a review essay (“Learning to Read--Almost: New Books in Early Native American Studies”) in Early American Literature, 48 (2013), 743-54.]

Rasmussen, Hans C. “Cultural Record Keepers: The Belfast Library and Society for Promoting Knowledge.” in Libraries & the Cultural Record, 44 (2009), 480-84.[The Belfast Reading Society established a subscription library in 1788, which was moved to a room in the White Linen Hall in 1802; the society changed its name to “Belfast Society for Promoting Knowledge” in 1792 and to “Belfast Library and Society for Promoting Knowledge” in 1837; the library, moved to a former linen warehouse in 1892 and commonly called “The Linen Hall Library,” is Belfast oldests in continuous use.]

Ratio studiorum [Society of Jesus]. See Adrien Demoustier et al.

Raven, James. “The Book as a Commodity.” Pp. 85-117 in The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain. Vol. 5: 1695-1830. Edited by Michael F. Suarez and Michael L. Turner. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 2009.

Raven, James. “Debating Bibliomania and the Collection of Books in the Eighteenth Century.” Library & Information History, 29 (2013), 196-209. [In a special issue on “Bibliomania and the Private Library,” edited by Rebecca Bowd.]

Raven, James. “Du qui au comment: À la recherche d’une histoire de la lecture en Angleterre.” Pp. 141-63 in Histoires de la lecture: Un Bilan des recherches. Edited by Roger Chartier. Paris: IMEC, 1995.

Raven, James (ed.). Free Print and Non-Commercial Publishing since 1700. Aldershot, Hants., U.K.: Ashgate, 2000. Pp. xiv + 258; illus. [Eleven papers from a 1996 conference by the Cambridge Project for the Book Trust; many involve the eighteenth century, such as Raven's introductory "Print for Free: Unsolicited Literature in Comparative Perspective" and, more especially, his account of Thomas Bray's books donated to North Americans, "Sent to the Wilderness: Mission Literature in Colonial America," David Money's study of commemorative verses produced at seventeenth- and eighteenth-century universities; Anna Giulia Cavagna's examination of the Venetian astronomer Giovanni Giacomo Marinoni's gifts; and Marcus Wood's of abolitionist literature, 1780-1838; just beyond our period is a study of Christian missionary literature in Bengal, 1800-1850, by Anindita Ghosh. Rev. by Bill Bell in Book Collector, 52 (2003), 268-70; by Alexandra Franklin in SHARP News, 10, no. 3 (2001), 6-7; by T. H. Howard-Hill in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 95 (2001), 139-40; (with other books) by Bridget Keegan in Eighteenth-Century Studies, 35 (2002), 144-48; by B. J. McMullin in Library, 7th ser., 3 (2002), 202-03.]

Raven, James. “Liberality and Librolarceny: Archbishops and their Public Libraries in the Seventeenth Century.” Lambeth Palace Library Annual Review, 2010 (2011), 58-76.

Raven, James. London Booksellers and American Customers: Transatlantic Literary Community and the Charleston Library Society, 1748-1811. Columbia: U. of South Carolina Press, 2001. Pp. xxii + 522; appended membership list (by date of entry); illustrations; transcript of letterbook. [Rev. (with another book) by Catherine Armstrong in Journal of the Printing Historical Society, n.s. 7 (2004), 89-91; by Karen Cajka in ECCB, 28 (2002); by Harlan Greene in College & Research Libraries, 64 (2003), 182-84; by Peter Hoare in Library, 7th ser., 4 (2003), 182-84; (favorably with qualifications) by Isabelle Lehuu in SHARP News, 12, no. 3 (Summer 2003), 9-10; by Keith Manley in Library History, 20 (2004), 76-78; by James E. May in East-Central Intelligencer, 17, no. 1 (January 2003), 66; (fav.) by Paul Ranger in Notes and Queries, n.s. 50 [248] (2003), 477-78; by William St. Clair in TLS (November 22, 2002), 32; (fav.) by Calhoun Winton in PBSA, 97 (2003), 113-14.

Raven, James (ed.). Lost Libraries: The Destruction of Great Book Collections since Antiquity. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. Pp. xiii + 294; illus.; index. [Includes Raven's "The Resonances of Loss"; Friedrich Buchmayr's "Secularization and Monastic Libraries in Austria"; Clarissa Campbell Orr's "Lost Royal Libraries and Hanoverian Court Culture"; Dominique Varry's "Revolutionary Seizures and their Consequences for French Library History"; and Margaret Connolly's "A Plague of Books: The Dispersal and Disappearance of the Diocesan Libraries of the Church of Ireland." Rev. by James Bengtson in Library, 7th series, 7 (2006), 330-31; (fav.) by Paul Duguid in TLS (July 16, 2004), 30; by Peter Hoare in SHARP News, 13, no. 4 (Autumn 2004), 8-9; by Mark Purcell in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 100 (2006), 387-89; by Paul Sturges in Library History, 21 (2005), 136.]

Raven, James. “Modes of Reading and Writing in the Private Library.” Pp. 49-60 in Lesen und Schreiben im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert. Edited by Paul Goetsch. Tübingen: Gunter Narr, 1994. Pp. x + 301.

Raven, James. “New Reading Histories, Print Culture, and the Identification of Change: The Case of Eighteenth-Century England.” Social History, 23 (1998), 268-87.

Raven, James. "The Representation of Philanthropy and Reading in the Eighteenth-Century Library." Libraries and Culture, 31 (1996), 492-510.

Raven, James, Helen Small, and Naomi Tadmore (eds.). The Practice and Representation of Reading in England. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 1996. Pp. xviii + 313; bibliography [291-97]; illus.; index. [Includes Raven's "From Promotion to Proscription: Arrangements for Reading and Eighteenth-Century Libraries" ((175-201); Jan Fergus's "Provincial Servants Reading in the Late Eighteenth Century" (202-25); and Tadmor's "'In the Even My Wife Read to Me': Women, Reading, and Household Life in the Eighteenth Century" (162-74).]

Rawson, David Andrew. "'Guardians of Their Own Library': A Contextual History of Print Culture in Virginia Society, 1750 to 1820." Dissertations at College of William and Mary. DAI 60A, no. 2 (Aug. 1999), 525.

Reading Experience Database. Online Database established in 2005 and acquiring citations and articles at related sites: http:// www. open.ac.uk/Arts/reading/. [The Reading Experience Database accumulates evidence of reading experiences, 1495-1945, placing documented evidence in a database that can be browsed and searched (beginning in 2005 and growing to include national subsets in early 2011 (Australia, Canada, Netherlands, New Zealand, and United Kingdom--the UK database held 10,000+ records on reading in 2009 and 30,000+ in 2011). Based at the Open University and the Institute of English Studies of the University of London and supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, the RED published from 2005-2009 RED Letter: The Newsletter of the Reading Experience Database, edited by Rosalind Crone of the Open University and Katie Halsey of the Institute of English Studies, in Winter, Spring, and Summer issues, noting publications, conferences, and scholarly activities of other sorts, while posting updates on the database itself. These issues have been placed in easily available PDF files at the website. In 2010 RED Letter was replaced with the web-blog Reading Experiences, Reading Technologies.]

"The Reading Experience Database, 1540-1945: Now Live!" SHARP News, 16, no. 3 (Summer 2007), 14-15. [At www.open.ac.uk/Arts/reading.]

Real, Hermann J. (ed.). The Reception of Jonathan Swift in Europe. (Athlone Critical Traditions: The Reception of British and Irish Authors in Europe.) Preface by series editor, Elinor Shaffer. London: Thoemmes; New York: Continuum, 2005. Pp. xxxii + 378; bibliography [284-364]; timeline. [Papers from a 2002 conference at the Ehrenpreis Center in Münster, generally focused on particular countries. Besides the excellent, lengthy bibliography (284-364, organized by chapter and thus by region and with subheadings for "translations, "criticism" and the like) and Professor Real's introduction (1-4), the volume includes Sabine Baltes's "Swiftian Material Culture" (273-83); Jorge Bastos da Silva's "A Lusitanian Dish: Swift to Portuguese Taste" (79-92); José Luis Chamosa González's "Swift's Horses in the Land of the Caballeros" (57-78); Michael Düring's essays "Detecting Swift in the Czech Lands," "From Russian 'Sviftovedenie' to the Soviet School of Swift Criticism: The Dean's Fate in Russia," and "No Swift beyond Gulliver: Notes on the Polish Reception" (214-23, 170-213, 156-69); Filipina Filipova's "Swift's Impact in Bulgaria" (238-47); Wilhelm Graeber's "Swift's First Voyages to Europe: His Impact on Eighteenth-Century France" (5-16); Flavio Gregori's "The Italian Reception of Swift" (17-56); Nils Hartmann's "Swiftian Presence in Scandinavia: Denmark, Norway, Sweden" (142-55); Gabriella Hartvig's "The Dean in Hungary" (224-37); Astrid Krake, Hermann J. Real, and Marie-Luisa Spieckermann's "The Dean's Voyages into Germany" (93-141); and Mihaela Mudure's "From the Infantile to the Subversive: Swift's Romanian Adventures" (248-72). Chapters tend to treat translations, criticism, and reception in general. Rev. by Ralf Haekel in Das achtzehnte Jahrhundert, 31, no. 1 (2007), 131-33; by Robert Mahony in Irish Studies Review, 14, no. 2 (2006), 287-88; (favorably; with other books) by David Nokes in TLS (March 3, 2006), 26; by Adam Rounce in SHARP News, 15, nos. 2-3 (Spring & Summer 2006), 22; (favorably) by Manuel Schonhorn in Scriblerian, 41 (2008), 46-47.]

Real, Hermann J. "Stella's Books." Swift Studies, 11 (1996), 70-83; 1 portrait; rpt. 110-27 in Securing Swift: Selected Essays. Dublin: Maunsel & Company, 2001.

Real, Hermann J. “Swift and Flavius Vopiscus.” Swift Studies, 24 (2009), 171-74.

Real, Hermann J. "Swift's Non-Reading." Pp. 123-38 of That Woman--Studies in Irish Bibliography: A Festschrift for Mary "Paul" Pollard. Edited by Charles Benson Charles, and Siobhan Fitzpatrick. Foreword by Maurice Craig; Introduction by Charles Benson. Dublin: Lilliput Press for the Library Association of Ireland Rare Books Group, 2005. Pp. xv + 310; bibliography of publications by Pollard [287-89]; illustrations; index.

Real, Hermann J., and Helgard Stöver-Leidig, eds. Reading Swift: Papers from the Fourth Münster Symposium on Jonathan Swift. Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 2003. Pp. 452; illustrations; index; tables; summaries preceding essays. [Includes Brean S. Hammond's "Swift's Reading" (133-46); and Heinz Vienken's examination of Swift's library and reading ("'Nobody has ever written a really good book about Jonathan Swift': Scouring the Recesses of the Swiftian Mind," 147-58).]

Real, Hermann J., and Heinz J. Vienken. “Books from Stella’s Library.” Swift Studies, 1 (1986), 68-72.

Real Academia de la Historia. Collección de Don Juan Bautista Muñoz [1745-1799]. (Collección Biblioteca.) Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia, 2010. DVD; over 65,000 colored images.

Rebecchini, Damiano, and Raffaella Vassena (eds.). Reading in Russia: Practices of Reading and Literacy Communication, 1760-1930. Milan: Ledizioni, 2014. Pp. 282.

Reder, Anne-Marie and François Robichon (eds.). Patrimoine des bibliothèques de France: Un guide des régions. 11 vols. Paris: Payot, 1995. [Volumes address different regions. [See Albert Labarre’s review of vol. 10 in Bulletin du bibliophile (1995), 210].

Ree-Scholtens, G. F. van der. Deugd boven geweld: Een geschiedenis van Haarlem, 1245-1995. Hilversum: Verloren, 1995. Illus. [Treats book culture, the print trade, and scholarship, including, on the period 1500-1800, E. K. Grootes, E. C. J. Nieuweboer, and J. J. Temminck's "Onderwijs, wetenschap en boekdrukkers" (221-34); D. Hogenelst, H. J. Jumelet, and J. J. Temminck's "Eerste onderwijs, boeken, drukker en wetenschap" (88-96); and A. van Kalmthout, D. P. Snoep, and B. M. J. Speet's "Onderwijs, wetenschap, drukkers en musea" (385-408).]

Reed, Daniel. “An Early Book Subscription by Sterne.” Shandean, 23 (2012), 91-97. [Sterne subscribed to Thomas Gent’s Historia Compendiosa Anglicana in 1740.]

Reed, Peter P. “Book Objects, Archives, and Ritual Repertories in Colonial New England.” Textual Cultures, 4, no. 1 (Spring 2009), 148-50. [Review essay on David Hall’s Ways of Writing: The Practice and Politics of Text-Making in Seventeenth-Century New England (2008) and Matthew Brown’s The Pilgrim and the Bee (2007).]

Reeves, Marjorie. Pursuing the Muses: Female Education and Nonconformist Culture, 1700-1900. London: Leicester U. Press, 1997. Pp. 216; illus.; map.

Regan, Shaun (ed.). Reading 1759: Literary Culture in Mid-Eighteenth-Century Britain and France. (Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture 1650-1850) Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press; Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2013. Pp viii + 255; bibliography; index. ISBN: 978-1-61148-478-6. [This aptly titled collection focuses on literary developments in 1759, a year with its share of important books. Regan contributes an introduction and the concluding part or essay, entitled “Writers, Reviewers and the Culture of Reading” (209-32). Between Regan’s remarks come ten essays grouped in pairs under the five headings: “Writing Empire” (with James Watt on Rasselas and Simon Davies on Voltaire’s Candide); “Sentimental Ethics, Luxurious Sexualities” (with Nigel Wood on Adam Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments in 1759, and Mary Peace on erotic memoirs related to prostitutes published in 1759); “Authorship and Aesthetics” (with Adam Rounce’s “Young [Conjectures on Original Composition], Goldsmith, Johnson, and the Idea of the Author in 1759” [95-12], and Rosalind Powell on Christopher Smart’s Jubilate Agno); “Enlightenment and its Discontents” (with Rebecca Ford on the “Encyclopédie in 1759,” and Jame Ward’s “Lost Cause: Hume, Causation, and Rasselas); and “Originality and Appropriation” (with Moyra Haslett on originality and vols. 1-2 of Tristram Shandy, and Kate Rumbold on “Shakespeare’s ‘Propriety’” and Sarah Fielding’s The History of the Couness of Dellwyn). Rev. by Patricia Gael in The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer, n.s. 27, no. 2 (September 2013), 30-32; by Leah Orr in Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 26, no. 3 (Spring 2014), 489-91.]

“Règlement pour la Bibliothèque Nationale (Paris 1797)” Biblos, 60, no. 1 (2011), 61-78.[In a special issue with the theme “Wie kommt die Ordnung in die Bibliothek? Wissen verwalten” and preceded in the issue by Benjamin Steiner’s “Die Fundamente der Vergangenheit. Historische Tabellenwerke und die Ordnung der Geschichte in der frühen Neuzeit” (29-58) and “Bibliotheksordnung Hofbibliothek Wien (1726).”]

Reid, David A. “Education as a Philanthropic Enterprise: The Dissenting Academies of Eighteenth-Century England.” History of Education, 39 (2010), 299-317.

Reid, Hugh. The Nature and Uses of Eighteenth-Century Book Subscription Lists. Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen, 2010. Pp. 67. [Rev. (very unfavorably) by Melvyn New in Scriblerian, 45, no. 2 (Spring 2013), 277-78; by Patrick Spedding in Script & Print, 36, no. 1 (2012).]

Reid, Peter H. "The Decline and Fall of the British Country House Library." Libraries and Culture, 36 (2001), 345-66.

Reid, Thomas. "The Palace of Imagination: King's Library Curator Kim Sloan Shows How the Enlightenment Catalogued Human Understanding." Rare Book Review, No. 344 (December 2003); posted as of October 2006 at


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