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  • Notes on Contributors

Paul Davis is Reader in English at University College London. He is the author of Translation and the Poet’s Life: The Ethics of Translating in English Poetic Culture, 1646–1726 (Oxford, 2008) and has published widely on Restoration and eighteenth-century literature, with a particular emphasis on poetry and classicism. The present article arises out of archival research conducted for an edition of Rochester: Selected Poems, which appeared in 2013 in the series Oxford World’s Classics.

John D. Gordan, III, a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, clerked for the Honorable Inzer B. Wyatt, US District Judge (SDNY) from 1969 to 1971, and served as an Assistant US Attorney (SDNY) from 1971 to 1976. He was in private legal practice in New York City from 1976 to 2011.

Jordan Howell is a PhD candidate in English at the University of Delaware studying under Matthew J. Kinservik. His dissertation, ‘Book Abridgment in Eighteenth-Century England’, challenges the view that abridgements are incomplete works and therefore irrelevant in the formation of the literary canon.

Dennis E. Rhodes retired as Deputy Keeper of Printed Books at the British Library in 1985 and continues his researches mainly on Italian bibliography.

REVIEWERS
A. S. G. Edwards is Professor, Medieval English Manuscripts, at the University of Kent.

Veronica Pizzarotti is completing her PhD at the University of Manchester on editions of Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso.

Roger Gaskell is an antiquarian bookseller specializing in early-modern scientific and medical books.

Mirjam M. Foot, former Director of Collections and Preservation at the British Library, is Professor Emerita of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. [End Page 374]

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