‘With grace and wit, *Enchantment in Romantic Literature *dispatches not only the cynical skepticism of de Manian deconstruction and the doctrinaire demystifications of psychoanalysis and the New Historicism, but their undergirding materialist metaphysics that have become an “already-presumed form of common sense” in Romantic studies. Hopps rightly claims we’ve been “reading in the shadows of their exclusionary assumptions” for these several decades. His crisp prose, dazzlingly wide and deep research, and spot-on readings drench in light the provisionality of that critical materialism and reclaim precisely what critique puts off limits: the ways the Romantics – Byron as much as Wordsworth – transport us to the ambitious heights of Enlightenment epistemologies to face us with the open spaces of uncertainty and possibility about the very nature of reality that criticism most often overlooks and forecloses. Hopps’s ontologically open, rigorously post-secular framework is an absolute delight, uncovering an identifiable, catachrestic Romantic poetics insistently evoking that in reality which evades determinate representation. His study renders their participatory vision newly accessible, situating readers as porous beings in a relational cosmos, where it’s not at all obvious that their transcendental intimations are so much spurious nonsense to be silently left aside. This book fills me with hope for our field.’ Professor Lori Branch, University of Iowa