"The Secret Life of Things serves to encapsulate the most important work done recently on eighteenth-century it-narratives, while advancing the field significantly. It is likely to remain the definitive treatment of the eighteenth-century it-narrative for years to come, while also being of permanent interest to students of the history of the novel."
- Adam Potkay (author of Hope: A Literary History) “Mark Blackwell has assembled a group of lively, provocative, and readable essays. We are lucky to have them. . . . The Secret Life of Things is an erudite and enjoyable guide, well-written and wide-ranging.”
(Review of English Studies) “Blackwell’s collection marks the arrival of a substantial new body of work. Admirably inclusive . . . The Secret Life of Things will be useful for anyone who is working on objects in eighteenth-century narrative.”
(TLS) “Blackwell’s collection brings together some of the best previously published essays on eighteenth-century thinginess, such as Aileen Douglas’s essay on it-narratives and empire (1993), and important new work by Barbara Benedict, Jonathan Lamb, Deidre Lynch, Markman Ellis, Lynn Festa, and Blackwell himself, among others . . . [This] is a valuable collection for eighteenth-century studies and for ‘thing-theory’ more generally.”
(Modern Philology) “I think (this volume) represents essentially the best-case scenario for the edited collection of literary criticism that is organized not for a series or as primarily a teaching tool but as the best way of compiling a field’s state of knowledge on an emerging topic . . . (it) remains an indispensable resource for scholars working on a host of topics related to the it-narrative and the animated objects of eighteenth-century literature.”
(SEL) “Complex and sophisticated. . . . Blackwell’s volume both carefully scrutinizes it-narratives and provides interesting perspectives on them.”
(Style) “The collection . . . adroitly consolidates, assesses, and extends the best work available in this fruitful intersection of theory and culture. The book boasts some of the most distinguished scholarly critics of the 18th-century operating in the field today, and one finds herein numerous instances of scintillating and luminous critical prose. . . . Recommended.”
(CHOICE) “The Secret Life of Things fully realizes the ambitions that Mark Blackwell established for the volume-both to leaven the history of prose fiction and to contribute to our understanding of eighteenth-century attitudes towards the new object world -ambitions that square with those of the Bucknell series in which it appears, devoted to eighteenth-century literature and culture.”
(ECF) “By bringing our attention to a genre that realizes the apparently impossible condition of material objects behaving as narrative protagonists, Blackwell's collection destabilizes our received impressions of eighteenth-century narrative as an evolving institution of realism . . . [I]ntriguing analyses and claims fill The Secret Life of Things.”
(Eighteenth-Century Life)