

And he includes anecdotes-for example.Fulford Adams's remark when Henry Folger approached him about buying a folio edition: 'It is something to have one.' ntiment could apply to West's book." - Choice "In addition to providing a thorough and well-documented study exploring condition, pedigree, annotation, and prices of the first folio, West also provides extensive information for research and reference. One wonders why we had to wait nearly four centuries for such a study." - Notes and Queries West's study is the first comprehensive study of the book as book and as cultural object. Shakespearians and book history scholars should immediately get it on their shelves." - Notes and Queries If West means to go on as he has started then these four volumes will become the most comprehensive study of any single edition of a secular author ever produced. "The first volume of 'The First Folio Series' provides much information, but it also whets our appetite for the next volumes. I look forward with anticipation to the next three volumes." - Review, 25 "I believe West's study of the First Folio will become, when completed, a model of how one does post-publication book history. "The first volume is a mine of information filled with tables, charts, appendices, and just about all a student could want for getting into the history of the First Folio's afterlife." - Review, 25 It also indicates the history of the volumes' ownership - ranging from counry parson to President of Standard Oil. It charts the number and distribution of copies at the beginning and end of the twentieth century, surveys the nineteen facsimile editions since 1807, and assesses earlier listings of the work since 1824, including Sidney Lee's Census (1902). The present volume breaks new ground in its account of the price and sales history of the books - from one pound in the seventeenth century to over half a million pounds today - placing this in the context both of Shakespeare's standing and of the contemporary world of antiquarian book sales. And yet its story is a highly significant contribution to the history of the book worldwide, and crucial to the study of Shakespeare's 'afterlives'. Vast amounts have been written on it up to its publication - for example on its printing and proofreading - but very little since it left the press in 1623. The Shakespeare First Folio is arguably the greatest book ever written in the English language, and it is the only source for half the plays (including Macbeth and The Tempest). Oxford Research Encyclopedias: Global Public Health.The European Society of Cardiology Series.

Oxford Commentaries on International Law.
