"Richly archival and powerful in its conceptions, Mee's Networks of Improvement boldly goes where few literary historians have been before, into the heartlands of industrializing Britain for a magisterially orchestrated and methodologically groundbreaking study. Mee has given us a picture of British intellectual and social relationships that will stand unmatched for a long time to come."-- "Jon Klancher, Carnegie Mellon University"
"Mee offers a sophisticated account of reading as a social practice central to the circulation of knowledge, both grand and granular, responsive to large questions with local particularities. Networks of Improvement is comprehensive, clearly written, and carefully organized."-- "Jonathan Sachs, Concordia University"
"A capsule review cannot do justice to Networks of Improvement. . . . The book is immensely learned and theoretically sophisticated (Bruno Latour occupies a prominent place), and it is well grounded in both primary and secondary texts and supported by extensive original research in the archives. . . . Essential."-- "Choice"
"Be prepared to be surprised by Networks of Improvement. The early industrial revolution is not a place that conjures up images of improvement, or liberalism, or advances in medical practice. . . . Jon Mee's immensely learned book complicates and revises our images."-- "Northern History"