'Phrenology in Practice deliberately refocuses historical attention toward 'users' who attended lectures, read pamphlets, and consulted phrenologists individually. Carla Bittel's extensive research in diaries and letters, reveals that subjects responded, not without critique, to phrenology's visual and tactile analyses and often applied the authoritative, even scientific, self-identity to choices about health, life partners, child raising, and, indeed, a well-framed life.' Sally Kohlstedt, University of Minnesota