'Innovative in its adherence to subtle changes and continuations between the 1640s, 50s, 60s and 70s, Heidi Craig's brilliant study promises to reshape our thinking about early modern theatre history and the emergence of the field we now know as Renaissance drama. Drawing on detailed knowledge of book and theatre history, Craig illustrates how the apparent death of theatre in 1642, and the commercial practices of individual stationers, helped to shape both the posthumous histories of Shakespeare, Jonson and Beaumont and Fletcher, and ways in which drama was conceptualised in the late seventeenth century and beyond.' Emma Depledge, Université de Neuchâtel 'By focusing on the publication of drama during the closure of the theatres, Heidi Craig has given us a fascinating and original history of the English stage and its canonization as literature. With meticulous research but always written in a lively style, this book will be required reading for anyone interested in Early Modern English drama.' Zachary Lesser, University of Pennsylvania