Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia
  • Notes on Contributors

G. Thomas Tanselle was awarded the Gold Medal of the Bibliographical Society (London) in 2015. The present volume of Studies in Bib liography is the forty-fifth consecutive one to which he has contributed.

Ralph Norris focusses his academic research on Malory's Morte Darhur, particularly on textual and source criticism. He is the author of the chapter on Malory's sources in Boydell and Brewer's new Companion to Malory as well as Malory's Library. His work has appeared in journals such as Studies in Philology, Arthurian Literature, and the Journal of the International Arthurian Society. He teaches in the Department of English at Sam Houston State University.

Steven Tabor is Curator of Rare Books at the Huntington Library. Prior to that he worked for UCLA's Clark Library and the English Short-Title Catalogue (University of California, Riverside). He has published descriptive bibliographies of Sylvia Plath (1987) and Ted Hughes (with Keith Sagar, 1983; expanded ed. 1998). His catalogue of the work of Los Ange-les's Plantin Press (co-authored with Tyrus Harmsen) appeared in 2005. Since 2011 he has taught analytical bibliography at Rare Book School.

Amy Bowles completed her PhD, '"Ralph Crane and Early Modern Scribal Culture," in 2017 at Girton College, University of Cambridge. She works in the Special Collections department of Senate House Library, University of London. She is currently editing John Day's play The Parliament of Bees for the Malone Society.

Samuel V. Lemley is a PhD candidate in English at the University of Virginia.

Tristan Power is Lecturer in Classics at Columbia University. He is the co-editor of Suetonius the Biographer: Studies in Roman Lives (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 2014), and also one of the contributors to Writing Biography in Greece and Rome: Narrative Technique and Fictionalization (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2016).

Daniel Lawler is a practicing architect in Brooklyn, New York. He has taught both design and architectural history at New York City College of Technology and New York Institute of Technology, and was an editor of Architecture and Body (Rizzoli, 1990). He is an avid collector of books on twentieth-century architecture.

Elizabeth K. Lynch is the Assistant to the Editor of Studies in Bibliography.

Anne G. Ribble is the Secretary-Treasurer and Executive Secretary of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia.

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