"An invaluable contribution to book history of the eighteenth century. . . . A Nation of Readers lays to rest such old canards as that circulating libraries only stocked novels . . . and he demonstrates that reading in (or at least through) libraries was a phenomenon that stretched from the lowest laborer to the royal family."—Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer
2010 Eliza Atkins Gleason Book Award from the American Library Association Library History Round Table
“By his approach, Allan is able to offer a new synthesis of the development of reading as an activity.”—James Raven, English Historical Review
1 'A Taste of Polite Writing': Readers and Reading in Georgian England
2 'An Able Tutor and Agreeable Companion': Book Clubs and Reading Societies
3 'An Ample Fund of Amusement and Instruction': The Subscription Libraries
4 'Inlets of Vice and Debauchery': The Circulating Libraries
5 'Our Publick Library': Other Institutional Collections
6 'I Have Not Read So Many Books for Nothing': Reading and the Making of a Polite Public
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