"In this ambitious and far-reaching book, Geoffrey Turnovsky sets out to revise and redraw the dominant paradigms of the emergence of the modern author and the relationship of authors to the literary market in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century France. To counteract what has become a series of clichés, Turnovsky's own revisionist narrative offers a richly textured analysis of the complex, often paradoxical representations and rhetorical moves that writers took when negotiating between the conflicted rationales of the institutions of literary and social life in prerevolutionary France." (Elena Russo, Johns Hopkins University)