Above all what emerges from this fascinating collection of essays is the importance of material approaches to literary and nonliterary texts in dialogue with other modes of reading. As such, meaning is collaborative, constructed by diverse agents, including but not limited to authors, compilers, scribes, printers, stationers, and readers, and generated by physical and visual as well as textual forms such as script, typeface, page layout, paper, and size in other words, all the various material extratextual features that communicated significant meaning to early modern writers and readers. James Daybell, University of Plymouth, Renaissance Quarterly 69.4 (Winter 2016) -- .