Transatlantic Roots Music is a stimulating collection of thought-provoking essays by fourteen writers on a wide range of topics relating to issues of discovery, reception, and revival of various forms of folk--or 'roots'--music by audiences and performers in the US and Britain. English blues scholar Paul Oliver offers a concise overview of the early years of the development of the British audience for American blues, a history in which he played no small part. Christian O'Donnell then offers, in turn, a clear-headed appraisal of Oliver's multi-faceted role in shaping conceptions of blues by white audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. John Hughes explores the impact that traditional English song had on the early work of Bob Dylan as a result of Dylan's brief visit to London in 1962. Guitarist Duck Baker concludes the volume with some thoughtful--some might say heretical--commentary on the use of the term 'Celtic' to describe the currently popular musical genre based on Irish and Scottish traditional music. Taken as a whole, the authors remind us that the business of musical exchange across the Atlantic is a longstanding--and ongoing--phenomenon and offer a wealth of new insights on the process and its significance.--Paul F. Wells, director emeritus, Center for Popular Music at Middle Tennessee State University