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Shakespeare's First Reader

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Richard Stonley has all but vanished from history, but to his contemporaries he would have been an enviable figure. A clerk of the Exchequer for more than four decades under Mary Tudor and Elizabet...
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  • 18 October 2019
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Richard Stonley has all but vanished from history, but to his contemporaries he would have been an enviable figure. A clerk of the Exchequer for more than four decades under Mary Tudor and Elizabeth I, he rose from obscure origins to a life of opulence; his job, a secure bureaucratic post with a guaranteed income, was the kind of which many men dreamed. Vast sums of money passed through his hands, some of which he used to engage in moneylending and land speculation. He also bought books, lots of them, amassing one of the largest libraries in early modern London.

In 1597, all of this was brought to a halt when Stonley, aged around seventy-seven, was incarcerated in the Fleet Prison, convicted of embezzling the spectacular sum of £13,000 from the Exchequer. His property was sold off, and an inventory was made of his house on Aldersgate Street. This provides our most detailed guide to his lost library. By chance, we also have three handwritten volumes of accounts, in which he earlier itemized his spending on food, clothing, travel, and books. It is here that we learn that on June 12, 1593, he bought "the Venus & Adhonay per Shakspere"—the earliest known record of a purchase of Shakespeare's first publication.

In Shakespeare's First Reader, Jason Scott-Warren sets Stonley's journals and inventories of goods alongside a wealth of archival evidence to put his life and library back together again. He shows how Stonley's books were integral to the material worlds he inhabited and the social networks he formed with communities of merchants, printers, recusants, and spies. Through a combination of book history and biography, Shakespeare's First Reader provides a compelling "bio-bibliography"—the story of how one early modern gentleman lived in and through his library.

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Price: $49.95
Pages: 344
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Material Texts
Publication Date: 18 October 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812251456
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / Books & Reading, Literary studies: general, LITERARY CRITICISM / Renaissance
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"The facts of Richard Stonley's life are lucidly set out by Felicity Heal in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Jason Scott-Warren's book offers something else. The dust jacket features Arcimboldo's painting 'The Librarian', which depicts a man made out of books. Shakespeare's First Reader is in part the literary equivalent. It is a fascinating blend of book history, biography and cultural history, and, like Arcimboldo's pictorial compilation, both vivid and original."
Jason Scott-Warren is Reader in Early Modern Literature and Culture at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Gonville and Caius College.

Preface
A Note on Conventions

Introduction. Material Readers
Chapter 1. Shopping for Shakespeare
Chapter 2. Accounting for the Self
Chapter 3. On Aldersgate Street
Chapter 4. People of the Book
Chapter 5. Paper Travels
Chapter 6. A Booke in Commendacion of the Ladye Branche
Chapter 7. Meet the Chillesters
Chapter 8. Reading in the Fleet
Conclusion

Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments