“Reading this book as a PhD student, I found Butler’s argument valuable and frightening – more food for the paranoia that seems to be my (our?) bread and butter. … On the bright side, it made me think proactively about co-writing and multi-disciplinary collaboration as challenges to the ingrained privileging of hierarchised, sole-author citations.” (Gabriel Duckels, International Research in Children's Literature, Vol. 13 (1), 2020)“This is a timely, pertinent book, given how the changes brought about in academic literary studies over the past 25 years have caused the discipline to question its nature and purpose. … Her enterprise is commendable and the book is a worthwhile contribution to the debate on literary studies.” (Richard Bradford, timeshighereducation.com, October, 2018)