Ronyak's intricate methodology, and especially the central position of women in this book, will be an invaluable model for future performance-centric song scholarship that continues to challenge and complement text^music hermeneutics. All in all, this debut monograph is a significant and innovative addition to the study of the early nineteenth-century lied.(Music & Letters) As a musicologist who has studied rather extensively text-music relations in German Lieder, I have long been aware of some important voices in the field. Certain of their writings have provided eye-opening and ear-opening jolts to interdisciplinary studies, generally within the world of musical scholarship. . . . I may be accused of hyperbole, but I consider Jennifer Ronyak's Intimacy, Performance, and the Lied in the Early Nineteenth Century as having a similar jolt-providing nature. . . . Her rich interdisciplinary approach is indeed a model for others to follow.- Jrgen Thym (Revue de Musicologie) In privileging historical perspectives on subjectivity and performance, Ronyak's monograph offers a rare glimpse into the private, semiprivate, and public contexts that shaped nineteenth-century sociability and concert programming. . . . Ronyak's stimulating study will be welcomed by all who continue to explore the rich expressive potential of poetry and music in the nineteenth-century lied.- Loretta Terrigno (NOTES: QTLY JRL MUSIC LIB ASSN)