’In this user-friendly edition, the 'Entring Book' is a long overdue gift to scholars of late seventeenth-century England. It is a gold mine of notes, news, and reflections on the political, religious, cultural, and social events, as well as on individuals, during fourteen critically important years... This collection of wide-ranging essays effectively brings fresh questions and perspectives to understanding the decade of the 1680s. It will be of value to graduate students as well as their mentors, and to others interested in innovative approaches to Restoration England.’ Journal of British Studies ’There are no duds in this collection... none of the essays are less then original, scholarly and lucid. Each of these essays will find a distinct audience, but the whole collection will be required reading for any serious student of the 1680s.’ Ecclesiastical History ’Ashgate is to be congratulated on this volume which makes me wish I had attended the conference... That the book under review delivers such an insight into this world derives not only from the success of the editor and contributors in producing a tightly woven, scholarly and well-written collection but equally from the idea of focusing it upon a single massive primary source: the manuscript 'Entring Book' of nonconformist cleric Roger Morrice...’ English Historical Review ’As a snapshot of scholarship in the Restoration era, the volume is quite excellent. Individual contributions update and question our understanding of key areas, including the nature and role of an emerging public sphere, political structures in the first age of party, the genres of writing used to debate the fundamental issues of religion and constitution, and the place of England in a wider world.’ 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era