2016 winner of The Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize
From the Committee: Mary L. Shannons book is an innovate expansion of the current interest in tracing networks into a consideration of the more concrete juxtaposition of bodies and buildings in space. Structured creatively around a day in the life of the street, the book entices us into seeing what would have been obvious to the Victorian eye and ear, but which our standard narratives have occluded. Shannon connects some of the more ephemeral products of the press and the situation of their production with canonical works, such as Bleak House, produced in the same milieu.Its a book that models new ways to do our business.
Awarded the Colby Book Prize
'Mary L. Shannons informative book offers an entirely new way to think about print culture. In focusing on Wellington Street off the Strand, where important Victorian writers such as Dickens, Mayhew, and Reynolds maintained their offices, she demonstrates the significance of geography for understanding the print networks that developed in midcentury London.' - Anne Humpherys, City University of New York, USA, author of Travels into the Poor Mans Country: The Work of Henry Mayhew
Shannons exemplary research takes her on a series of errands in order to reconstruct the working practices of Wellington Street in the period under scrutiny: examining metropolitan and borough archives, city guide books, directories, advertisements, maps and playbills, as well as an admirable range of types and genres of literary production. - John Drew, University of Buckingham, Dickens Quarterly
This is such a good book. Much of its immediate impact lies in its striking originality, of structure and of method, even if sometimes not all of it comes off. And while the book is risktaking, exploratory, and conspicuous for the breadth of its data, its discourse is largely traditional and verbal, its readings are close and wide but not distant. - Laurel Brake, The London Journal
Certainly this is a book which deserves a wide readership of its own. Like Wellington Street itself, Shannons monograph and the new model of the literary network that she proposes has the potential for impact far beyond its apparent compass. - Jessica Hindes, University of London
The primary research here on Melbourne Punch, Orion Horne and the influence of Dickens and Sala upon Marcus Clarkes night-walking sketches addresses an important gap in the study of nineteenth-century Anglo-Australian transnational exchanges to date. It also extends the range of scholars and readers for whom this rich and extraordinarily detailed book is likely to be of interest: not only Dickensians, but those working on Victorian literary and visual cultures, nineteenth-century periodicals and newspapers, Melbournes Bohemia and anyone interested in the historical geography of urban space. - Catherine Waters, University of Kent
This, as I hope this review has made clear, is a work of impressive research in which intensive and meticulous historical, biographical and topographical research come together. The result is to provide us with a valuable addition to our knowledge and understanding of the way in which certain notable print networks, both in London and in Melbourne, were operating in the mid-nineteenth century. - Michael Slater, Birkbeck, University of London, UK