"Academics, irrespective of discipline, will find their knowledge enriched by reading any given chapter: though my own research, for example, overlaps significantly with both Corfe’s and Gammon’s excellent contributions, each uncovers sources previously unknown to me.... There is a fine line between “exhaustive” and “exhausting,” and ... this volume keeps on the right side of it."Oskar Cox JensenQueen Mary, University of LondonModern Philology, 23.03.2018"The editors are to be applauded for bringing together accounts of so many diverse aspects of the production, distribution and reception of street literature, for their chronological and geographical coverage, for attention to localised developments and individuals in the trade, and for the high level of scholarship that has gone into its making. It also profits from an extensive, up-to-date bibliography."Anette HaganJournal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Societyno. 13 (2018), pp. 115-118"The editors of this important collection of essays are both well established in the field of street literature and folklore history. They have brought together an impres sive range of contributors, all of whom bring their own insights into this rather amorphous field of study. At one time, street literature would hardly have been regarded as a field worthy of scholarly attention. Most literary scholars, bibliographers, and librarians regarded chapbooks, ballads, song-sheets, and broadsides with disdain. in many libraries (with some notable exceptions) such apparently ephemeral material is not even catalogued, being kept in boxes of miscellaneous items or in bound volumes of pamphlets and small booklets. This is changing, and scholars have in recent decades begun to take serious notice of street literature, approaching it from various angles: book history, cultural history, and literary studies, as well as folklore and, where appropriate, traditional music. This variety of approaches is entirely appropriate for such a diverse range of publications— ‘street literature’ being a handy catch-all frame of reference—and is reflected in this collec tion of essays."John Hinks, The Library, 7.20.2, June 2019"Both wide ranging and intensive, Street Literature of the Long Nineteenth Century: Producers, Sellers, Consumers, edited by David Atkinson and Steve Roud, is a compendious account of cheap printed literature as sold and performed in the streets, markets and fairgrounds across nineteenth-century Britain. The book is a treasure trove of sources and commentary for the specialist, yet has so much to offer other readers on many aspects of common life… Street Literature of the Long Nineteenth Century is a rich source book and annotated research aid with content and context analysis and historical commentary. It will be invaluable to students in its particular field but should also have a wider attraction as a spirited and revealing account of a major mode of popular culture in the swarming Victorian streetscape."Peter Bailey, University of Manitoba & Indiana University, BloomingtonVictorian Studies (61.2), Winter 2019, p.315