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  • Notes on Contributors

Christopher D. Cook is a librarian at George Washington University. He was previously a rare-book cataloguer at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Alexandra da Costa is a University Lecturer in the English Faculty at Cambridge, working on early-Reformation printing and the way evangelicals shaped reading practices.

E. A. Jones is senior Lecturer in English Medieval Literature and Culture at the University of Exeter. He works mainly on the history of, and literature connected with, solitary vocations in late-medieval England. His most recent book was an edition of the Speculum Inclusorum and its Middle English translation, A Mirror for Recluses (2013).

John McTague is Lecturer in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature at the University of Bristol. He is currently working on a monograph, Things That Didn’t Happen, about the counter-historical tendencies in the literature and propaganda of the late-Stuart and Hanoverian periods.

Alison Walker is Lead Researcher on the Sloane Printed Books Project, based at the British Library (see www.bl.uk/catalogues/sloane). She was formerly Head of the National Preservation Office.

REVIEWERS

Kathryn Dutton is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the History Depart -ment at the University of Manchester.

David L. Gants is a member of the History of Text Technologies program at Florida State University and the Editor of the Papers of the Biblio -graphical Society of America.

Natalie Aldred is an independent researcher; she is currently investigating early advertisements.

Germaine Warkentin is Professor Emeritus of English in the University of Toronto.

Renae Satterley is Rare Books Librarian at Middle Temple Library, London.

Matthew Shaw is Curator, North American History at the British Library. [End Page 493]

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