"…Frost's <i>Reading, Wanting, and Broken Economics</i> invites interest from readers across a wide range of disciplinary interests from book history to media studies, and not least, of course, economics." — <i>Media International Australia</i><br /><br />"As both hyperlocal British book history and programmatic theory of literature and the economy, this book doesn't just do—<i>it succeeds</i> … <i>Reading, Wanting, and Broken Economics</i> will also be of keen interest to interdisciplinary studies of reading, bookselling, and/or the cultural economy. Highly recommended." — <i>Publishing Research Quarterly</i><br /><br />"Through a gripping thick description of the networks of institutions, legislation, markets, booksellers, and readers that make up the book trade in Southampton at the turn of the twentieth century, Simon Frost mounts a powerful challenge to two rather different orthodoxies: that of literary studies, with its prevailing distinctions between valued and disvalued texts and professional and lay reading practices, and that of neoclassical economics, with its reduction of socially grounded desires to individual calculations of utility maximization. This is the payoff of book history at its best: that it can come to terms with the complexities of the interlocking formation of economic and cultural value as it is played out in the rich particularity of a time and a place." — John Frow, University of Sydney<br /><br />"This stimulating study of bookshops as 'insatiable' sites of openly participatory reading is an arresting departure from literary-critical perspectives, focusing instead on books as material, commodified, and contested objects of economic exchange. It is a compelling contribution to the contentious conceptualization of literature as a traded commodity, and one securely grounded in—and also provocatively reinterpreting and theoretically reconstructing—the rich historical resources of a globally-connected port city." — James Raven FBA, author of <i>What is the History of the Book?</i><br /><br />"Simon Frost's study prompts book history to look both backwards and forwards. Its detailed study of the book trade in Southampton around 1900 recalls the Annales School, where fine-grained investigation of a single locale serves as a microcosm of a larger reality. But in its rethinking of the relationship between economics and literature, it pushes book history forwards—taking readers' desires seriously and asking how commerce and reading might be mutually constitutive. Impressively interdisciplinary, methodologically innovative, and engaged with the most recent critical theory, <i>Reading, Wanting, and Broken Economics</i> charts new ways to think about reading and its multiple payoffs." — Simone Murray, Monash University<br /><br />"<i>Reading, Wanting, and Broken Economics</i> provides a robust argument for fuller political economies of reading. In this impressive work, Simon Frost skillfully locates his case study within a richly nuanced historical, political, networked cultural, and economic landscape, which results in an intellectual—and, often entertaining—illustration of how we can study twenty-first-century readers within a commodity culture. This work is an exemplary illustration of the necessity to study historical and contemporary readers through an interdisciplinary lens. Our goal should be to do it as well as Frost does." — DeNel Rehberg Sedo, Mount Saint Vincent University