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The Library and Commonplace Books of Mary Booth of Dunham Massey (1704–1772)

This paper offers a detailed case study of Mary Booth as book owner and book user using two primary sources: her surviving library and her commonplace books. Booth’s fastidious approach to marking her books, coupled with the fortunate survival of the two houses where those books ultimately came to r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Library 2022-12, Vol.23 (4), p.399-421
Main Author: Potten, Edward
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This paper offers a detailed case study of Mary Booth as book owner and book user using two primary sources: her surviving library and her commonplace books. Booth’s fastidious approach to marking her books, coupled with the fortunate survival of the two houses where those books ultimately came to rest, allows for the reconstruction of her library almost in its entirety. Her commonplace books present an unusually rich record of her reading. Together, these sources offer a rare insight into the life, education, and book use of an early eighteenth-century gentlewoman, a rare comparator against which other women’s collections and habits of reading can be assessed.
ISSN:0024-2160
1744-8581
DOI:10.1093/library/fpac040