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  • Notes on Contributors

Niall Allsopp is studying for a D.Phil. in English at Oriel College, Oxford.

Abigail Brundin is Reader in Early Modern Literature and Culture in the Department of Italian, University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of St Catharine’s College.

John O’Neill is a Research Associate at King’s College London. He completed his doctoral thesis, entitled ‘Cervantes’s La entretenida: Translation, Performance and a Digital Edition’, in 2012. He is also a jazz musician, teacher, and the author of a series of books for saxophone, clarinet, and flute, published by Schott.

Dunstan Roberts is a Praeceptor in English at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. He has published on various aspects of library history and the history of the book in the early modern period.

Sebastian Sobecki is Professor of Medieval English Literature and Culture at the University of Groningen. He is the author of Unwritten Verities: The Making of England’s Vernacular Legal Culture, 1463–1549 (Notre Dame UP, 2015) and The Sea and Medieval English Literature (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2008). He is currently editing the first two volumes of Richard Hakluyt’s Principall Navigations for Oxford University Press (14 volumes in total) and co-editing, with Anthony Bale, Medieval English Travel: A Critical Anthology.

REVIEWERS
David McKitterick is Librarian of Trinity College, Cambridge, and a Past President of the Bibliographical Society.

Neil Harris is Professor of Bibliography and Library Studies at the University of Udine in Italy.

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

James H. Murphy is Professor of English and a former director of Irish Studies at DePaul University Chicago and a leading scholar on nineteenth-century Ireland.

Robert Laurie was formerly a Curator at the British Library Map Library. [End Page 124]

Angus O’Neill has been a full-time bookseller since graduating from Cambridge in 1982. He is an elected member of the Council of the Antiquarian Booksellers’ Association, and trades by post from central London as Omega Bookshop.

David Pearson is Director of Libraries, Archives, and the Guildhall Art Gallery in the City of London. He is a Past President of the Bibliographical Society, and has written extensively on the history of bookbinding, and private libraries.

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