'Swiftians and book-history addicts will find something novel and stimulating in each chapter of this enjoyable book; I can also highly recommend the introduction, by the joint editors James McLaverty and Paddy Bullard. This is a masterpiece of elegant, succinct scholarship that indicates the relationship between the themes covered in the book, showing the range of original scholarship behind the Swift Works project and the value of the textual editing even of well-known texts. The Swift who emerges from these pages - obsessive maker of books, crafty manipulator of bookmen and publishing methods, mischievous exploiter of multiple authorial and editorial voices - was a key figure in the burgeoning publishing culture in England and Ireland in the early eighteenth century. This beautifully-produced volume not only reminds one of his significance but, in itself, of the value of the original scholarship that underpins serious textual editing.' Andrew Carpenter, SHARP News
Introduction Paddy Bullard and James McLaverty; Part I. Swift's Books and their Environment: 1. Swift as a manuscript poet Stephen Karian; 2. Leaving the printer to his liberty: Swift and the London book trade, 1701–14 Ian Gadd; 3. What Swift did in libraries Paddy Bullard; Part II. Some Species of Swiftian Book: 4. The uses of the miscellany: Swift, Curll, and piracy Pat Rogers; 5. Swift's Tale of a Tub and the mock book Marcus Walsh; 6. Epistolary forms: published correspondence, letter-journals and books Abigail Williams; 7. Exploring the bibliographical limits of Gulliver's Travels Shef Rogers; 8. George Faulkner and Swift's collected works James McLaverty; Part III. Swift's Books in their Broader Context: 9. Censorship, libel and self-censorship Ian Higgins; 10. Swift's texts between Dublin and London Adam Rounce; 11. Publishing posthumous Swift: Dean Swift to Walter Scott Daniel Cook; 12. The mock-edition revisited: Swift to Mailer Claude Rawson.