Diplomacy, the most elaborately theorized mode of early modern contact, is the subject of Hampton's book. As Hampton argues, the simultaneous emergence of new literary genres like the sonnet sequence and new diplomatic practices like the exchange of resident ambassadors was no accident. Literary and diplomatic discourses shared a common origin in humanist rhetorical culture.(Clio) This is a splendid innovative book that significantly complicates and enriches our understanding of a period in which much innovation was indeed taking place in politics, culture, and literature—a book full of exciting twists and turns, original, challenging observations about canonical authors, and impressive depth and breadth.(Renaissance Quarterly)