'Fleck’s solid historical research draws upon papal archives, library inventories, church history, and artists’ workshop practices. By tracking the manuscript’s biography and its career as a cultural commodity, Fleck makes an innovative contribution to manuscript studies that will have a broad appeal not only to scholars and students of papal history and manuscript studies, but also to those who study the connections between art and politics, the court cultures of Angevin Naples and Avignon, patronage practices of the popes, and the history of medieval libraries.' Janis Elliott, Texas Tech University, USA 'Fleck’s study is a model for other scholars of manuscript illumination in its combination of recent theory with traditional analysis, as it reaches beyond problems of attribution and motif source that easily consume scholars working on thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Italian art. She couples her archival research and careful iconographic and stylistic analysis with recent historical and anthropological methodology... Fleck’s The Clement Bible at the Medieval Courts of Naples and Avignon provides an important model for future studies of individual manuscripts. She brings to manuscript studies methodologies that provide fascinating insights into the appearance of objects, their lives, and the social and political contexts in which they have functioned. But she skillfully joins them to her extensive art-historical and codicological experience and knowledge. While this combination is essential to contemporary manuscript studies, it remains rare.' caa.reviews 'Tracing the Clement Bible’s first century, Cathleen A. Fleck’s well-researched and revealing ’biography’ shows that its extraordinary journey began in the milieu of the royal court of Naples and moved next to the ancient Benedictine abbey of Monte Cassino from where it travelled to the papal palace of the Avignon popes and then to Spain.' Sharp News