"This book is a masterclass in how to find odd things, make sense of them and tell their story in order to reinterpret the historical record. […] Although Karr Schmidt has not gone as far as tasting Renaissance prints, her deep understanding of personal engagements with these objects rewrites standard assumptions about early modern print culture. The book is generously illustrated with colour images. It goes far beyond most publications by showing artefacts in different states, illustrating how an image can change, from its closed to open form, from male to female or devotional to obscene. It offers side-by-side comparisons of related interactive works in other media, from ivory carvings to monumental furniture, also in their different states. […] This book constructs a wholly new approach to the history of printed material, one that begins with the cutting, sewing and tactile reading of this hardback volume itself." - Elizabeth Savage, University of London, in: The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 160 (November 2018), pp. 980–981"This is the cutting edge of a thriving scholarship on prints as a versatile and dynamic art form. It would be of interest to historians interested in prints, art, science, medicine, religion and culture." - Sachiko Kusukawa, Trinity College, Cambridge, in: Historians of Netherlandish Art Reviews, March 2019"extremely well-researched […] heavily illustrated […] the book makes a substantial contribution to current development in print scholarship by foregrounding the materiality and actual use of prints." - Ashley D. West, Temple University, in: Print Quarterly 36.3 (2019)"fascinating work […] it breaks new ground […] an important contribution to the history of the book" - Sheila McTighe, Courtauld Institute of Art, in: The English Historical Review, Vol. 134, Issue 569 (August 2019), pp. 987–989"authoritative and beautifully illustrated […]. With its meticulous reconstruction of the processes of printing and its close readings of the multitude of ways in which readers procured knowledge, this study will become a necessary point of reference for all scholars working on early modern religious and scientific print culture." - Pollie Bromilow, University of Liverpool, in: Journal of Jesuit Studies 6.3 (August 2019), pp. 534–537"Schmidt’s volume delves into the subject ambitiously, turning long overdue attention to the contrivance of the medium [of interactive prints]. … the cases she presents are stimulating and might well inspire scholars to work out other facets of these artifacts and their historical contexts." - Charley Ladee, University of Utrecht, in: Nuncius 34.1 (February 2019), pp. 198-200"innovative […] the discussions of the sensory aspects of flaying, disrobing, and penetrating into other realms of knowledge adds a new dimension to the significance of the ownership and reception of printed images in early modern Europe." - Evelyn Lincoln, Brown University, in: Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. 73, No. 1 (Spring 2020), pp. 251–253