"Lesser's investigation into collections of Jaggard Quartos is fascinatingThis exciting, hands-on bibliography produces challenging new evidence about print, marketing, and Shakespeare's reputation[ I]t is hard to imagine a better scholarly justification than Zachary Lesser's terrific book for this deceptively simple method: looking, and looking again." (Modern Philology) "Zachary Lesser makes a significant contribution to various fields such as Shakespeare, bibliography, and the history of the book...Lesser's volume is focused, a book about a book, 'an extended case study, with I hope broad implications, of one of the most important books in the history of Shakespeare studies.' For Lesser, the history of the Pavier Quartos can tell us a great deal and in ways that are not always readily apparent...Lesser asks us to look closely again at the evidence embedded in 'centuries of accreted history' and does so with great success.
" (Renaissance and Reformation) "This book is a perfect illustration of what Lesser sees as the humanism of historically informed bibliography. Lesser's book is also a compelling counter to the now prevalent idea that the reproduction of early modern books online, from the almost comprehensive Early English Books Online (EEBO) series through to the growing number of scans of Shakespeare quartos and folios, will circumvent the need to examine multiple individual copies of these books. The kind of close look required for this type of study necessitates the individual examination of dozens, if not hundreds, of examples, though this is also an enterprise requiring collaboration with rare book librarians and archivists. Ghosts, Holes, Rips and Scrapes is a model for this increasingly important work; it is a pleasure to read, and the appropriately high production values for the book, which is copiously illustrated in colour, enhance that pleasure." (Parergon) "Ghosts, Holes, Rips and Scrapes is a book in which new and exciting material is presented and fascinating questions are asked, but answers remain elusive. Yet it is a genuine contribution precisely because, as Lesser says, he does not, like the detective in an Agatha Christie mystery, gather us all together in the living room or last chapter for the grand revelation that ties up all the details...Lesser's true goal is to persuade readers that 'The need for bibliographic reexamination is ongoing', and he urges us all to look 'closely enough and again and again'. In this his book sets a splendid example." (Textual Cultures) "This is a magnificent contribution to bibliography that will be read enthusiastically by Shakespeare scholars and anyone working in the field of the history of the book, textual editing, and bibliography at the highest level. Zachary Lesser elegantly conveys the implications of his rigorous archival research, and the impression is-quite thrillingly-of a scholar rewriting in significant ways the history of a book that we thought we knew." (Adam Smyth, Balliol College, Oxford University)