"Amory's work amounts to an engaging whodunit, recounting the adventures of a bibliographic sleuth sifting through sparse clues and then deducing the historically obscured motives behind authorship, audience, and book-printing and book-selling practices in colonial New England." (-Seventeenth-Century News) "These dense essays . . . challenge almost every received opinion on printing, the world of books, literary scholarship, and more. Read with care, they offer us insights and methods of investigation that we ignore at our peril. Here Hugh Amory sets the highest standards of excellence." (Papers of the Bibliographic Society of America)