Here is a full list of the books reviewed on the BSLS website, organized by date of publication:
1998
2004
2005
2006
- Kirstie Blair, Victorian Poetry and the Culture of the Heart
- Ian Burney, Poison, Detection and the Victorian Imagination
- Robert Crawford (ed.), Contemporary Poetry and Contemporary Science
- Clark Lawlor, Consumption and Literature
- George Levine, Darwin Loves You
- Elizabeth Green Musselman, Nervous Conditions: Science and the Body Politic in Early Industrial Britain
- Julia Reid, Robert Louis Stevenson, Science, and the Fin de Siècle
- Henry S. Turner, The English Renaissance Stage: Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts 1580-1630
- Martin Willis, Mesmerists, Monsters, and Machines
2007
- James Robert Allard, Romanticism, Medicine and the Poet's Body
- David Amigoni, Colonies, Cults and Evolution
- Philip Armstrong, What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity
- Philip Coleman (ed.), On Literature and Science
- Juliet Cummins and David Burchell (eds), Science, Literature and Rhetoric in Early Modern England
- Gowan Dawson, Darwin, Literature and Victorian Respectability
- Deborah Denenholz Morse and Martin A. Danahay (eds), Victorian Animal Dreams
- James Elwick, Styles of Reasoning in the British Life Sciences
- Samantha George, Botany, Sexuality and Women's Writing
- John Glendening, The Evolutionary Imagination in Late-Victorian Novels
- Pamela Gossin, Thomas Hardy's Novel Universe
- Robert Greene's Planetomachia, ed. by Nandini Das
- Rebekah Higgitt, Recreating Newton
- Alice Jenkins, Space and the 'March of Mind': Literature and the Physical Sciences in Britain, 1815-1850
- Elizabeth Leane, Reading Popular Physics
- Bernard Lightman, Victorian Popularizers of Science
- Bernard Lightman and Aileen Fyfe (eds),Science in the Marketplace
- Ralph O'Connor, The Earth on Show: Fossils and the Poetics of Popular Science, 1802-1856
- Gregory Radick, The Simian Tongue
- Jonathan Sawday, Engines of the Imagination
- Charlotte Sleigh, Six Legs Better
- Thomas Söderqvist (ed.), The History and Poetics of Scientific Biography
- Anne Stiles (ed.), Neurology and Literature, 1860-1920
- Peter Swirski, Of Literature and Knowledge
- Henry S. Turner, Shakespeare's Double Helix
2008
- Isobel Armstrong, Victorian Glassworlds
- Mark L. Brake and Neil Hook, Different Engines: How Science Drives Fiction and Fiction Drives Science
- Victoria Carroll, Science and Eccentricity
- Daniel Cordle, States of Suspense
- Eve-Marie Engels and Thomas F. Glick (eds), The Reception of Charles Darwin in Europe , vols 1 and 2
- Michael Golston, Rhythm and Race in Modernist Poetry and Science
- Graeme Gooday, Domesticating Electricity
- Jonathan Gottschall, The Rape of Troy: Evolution, Violence and the World of Homer
- Peter W. Graham, Jane Austen and Charles Darwin
- Richard Holmes,The Age of Wonder
- Noel Jackson,Science and Sensation in Romantic Poetry
- L. S. Jacyna, Medicine and Modernism
- Christa Knellwolf and Jane Goodall (eds), Frankenstein's Science
- Christa Knellwolf King, Faustus and the Promises of New Science, c. 1580-1730
- George Levine,Realism, Ethics and Secularism
- Steven McLean (ed.), H. G. Wells: Interdisciplinary Essays
- M. M. Mahood, The Poet as Botanist
- Benjamin Reiss, Theaters of Madness: Insane Asylums and Nineteenth-Century American Culture
- Eileen Reeves, Galileo's Glassworks: the Telescope and the Mirror
- Sharon Ruston (ed.), Literature and Science
2009
- Arianne Baggerman and Rudolf Dekker, Child of the Enlightenment
- Heike Bauer, English Literary Sexology
- Stephen H. Blackwell, The Quill and the Scalpel: Nabokov's Art and the Worlds of Science
- Peter J. Bowler, Science for All
- Brian Boyd, On the Origin of Stories (also discussed in a review essay on Evolutionary Criticism and Epic Poetry)
- Jenny Davidson, Breeding: A Partial History of the Eighteenth Century
- Michelle Faubert, Rhyming Reason: The Poetry of the Romantic-Era Psychologists
- Harold Fromm, The Nature of Being Human
- Rae Beth Gordon, Dances with Darwin, 1875-1910
- Elaine Hobby (ed.), The Birth of Mankind
- Bernadette Höfer, Psychosomatic Disorders in Seventeenth-Century French Literature
- John Holmes, Darwin's Bards
- Kevin Killeen, Biblical scholarship, science and politics in early modern England: Thomas Browne and the thorny place of knowledge
- Leah Knight, Of Books and Botany in Early Modern England
- Bernhard Kuhn, Autobiography and Natural Science in the Age of Romanticism
- Frank McConnell, The Science of Fiction and the Fiction of Science
- Steven McLean, The Early Fiction of H. G. Wells
- Jill L. Matus, Shock, Memory and the Unconscious in Victorian Fiction
- Ulrika Maude, Beckett, Technology and the Body
- Marjorie Perloff and Craig Dworkin (eds), The Sound of Poetry/The Poetry of Sound
- Nicholas Ruddick, The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel
- Jason R. Rudy, Electric Meters: Victorian Physiological Poetics
- Cannon Schmitt, Darwin and the Memory of the Human
- Tabitha Sparks, The Doctor in the Victorian Novel
- Laurence Talairach-Vielmas, Wilkie Collins, Medicine and the Gothic
- David Houston Wood, Time, Narrative, and Emotion in Early Modern England
2010
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- Suzanne Bailey, Cognitive Style and Perceptual Difference in Browning’s Poetry
- Ryan Barnett and Serena Trowbridge (eds), Acts of Memory: The Victorians and Beyond
- Avner Ben-Zaken, Cross-Cultural Scientific Exchanges in the Eastern Mediterranean, 1560–1660
- Jen E Boyle, Anamorphosis in Early Modern Literature
- Laura Brown, Homeless Dogs and Melancholy Apes: Humans and Other Animals in the Modern Literary Imagination
- Bruce Clarke with Manuela Rossini (eds), The Routledge Companion to Literature and Science
- Jill Galvan, The Sympathetic Medium
- Peter Garratt, Victorian Empiricism
- Barri J. Gold, ThermoPoetics: Energy in Victorian Literature and Science
- Margareth Hagen, Randi Koppen and Margery Vibe Skagen (eds), The Art of Discovery: Encounters in Literature and Science
- Katherine Hodgkin (ed.), Women, Madness and Sin in Early Modern England: The Autobiographical Writings of Dionys Fitzherbert
- Jeanette Eileen Jones and Patrick B. Sharp (eds), Darwin in Atlantic Cultures
- Meegan Kennedy, Revising the Clinic: Vision and Representation in Victorian Medical Narrative and the Novel
- Lydia H. Liu, The Freudian Robot
- Clinton Machann, Masculinity in Four Victorian Epics: A Darwinist Reading
- Agnieszka Soltysik Monnet, The Poetics and Politics of the American Gothic
- Graham Neville, Coleridge and Liberal Religious Thought: Romanticism, Science and Theological Tradition
- Kaara L. Peterson, Popular Medicine, Hysterical Disease, and Social Controversy in Shakespeare's England
- Vike Plock, Joyce, Medicine, and Modernity
- Laura Salisbury and Andrew Shail (eds), Neurology and Modernity
- Lisa T. Sarasohn, The Natural Philosophy of Margaret Cavendish
- Sally Shuttleworth, The Mind of the Child: Child Development in Literature, Science, and Medicine, 1840-1900
- Charlotte Sleigh, Literature and Science
- Srdjan Smajić, Ghost-Seers, Detectives, and Spiritualists
- Jennifer C. Vaught (ed.), Rhetorics of Bodily Disease and Health in Medieval and Early Modern England
- Lara Vetter, Modernist Writings and Religio-Scientific Discourse: H.D., Loy, Toomer
- Dongshin Yi, A Genealogy of Cyborgothic
- Paul Youngquist, Cyberfiction: After the Future
2011
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- Frédérique Aït-Touati, Fictions of the Cosmos
- Mark Bould and Sherryl Vint, The Routledge Concise History of Science Fiction
- Lynne Bruckner and Daniel Brayton (eds), Ecocritical Shakespeare
- Adam Budd (ed.), John Armstrong's 'The Art of Preserving Health'
- Katherine Byrne, Tuberculosis and the Victorian Literary Imagination
- Francesco Cassata, Building the New Man: Eugenics, Racial Science and Genetics in Twentieth-Century Italy
- Colette Colligan and Margaret Linley (eds), Media, Technology, and Literature in the Nineteenth Century
- Robert Crossley, Imagining Mars
- James Dougal Fleming (ed.), The Invention of Discovery, 1500-1700
- Laurie Garrison, Science, Sexuality and Sensation Novels
- Anne Green, Changing France: Literature and Material Culture in the Second Empire
- Alex Goody, Technology, Literature and Culture
- Hilary Grimes, Late Victorian Gothic
- Ian Hesketh, The Science of History in Victorian Britain
- Wendy Beth Hyman (ed.), The Automaton in English Renaissance Literature
- Tamara Ketabgian, The Lives of Machines
- George Levine, Darwin the Writer
- Howard Marchitello, The Machine in the Text: Science and Literature in the Age of Shakespeare and Galileo
- Harry W. Paul, Henri de Rothschild, 1872-1947: Medicine and Theater
- Melissa Anne Raines, George Eliot’s Grammar of Being
- Virginia Richter, Literature After Darwin
- Naomi Rokotnitz, Trusting Performance: A Cognitive Approach to Embodiment in Drama
- Karen Smyth, Imaginings of Time in Lydgate and Hoccleve’s Verse
- Valeria Tinkler-Villani and C.C. Barfoot (eds.), Restoring the Mystery of the Rainbow: Literature’s Refraction of Science
- Jo Wallwork and Paul Salzman (eds), Early Modern Englishwomen Testing Ideas
- Bryan Walpert, Resistance to Science in Contemporary American Poetry
2012
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- Karl Bell, The Magical Imagination: Magic and Modernity in Urban England 1780-1914
- Brian Boyd, Why Lyrics Last: Evolution, Cognition, and Shakespeare’s Sonnets
- Keith Brooke (ed.), Strange Divisions & Alien Territories
- Gowan Dawson and Bernard Lightman (eds), Victorian Science and Literature (8 vols)
- Jean Feerick and Vin Nardizzi (eds), The Indistinct Human in Renaissance Literature
- Christine Ferguson, Determined Spirits
- Judy Hayden (ed.), Travel Narratives, The New Science and Literary Discourse, 1569-1750
- John Holmes (ed.), Science and Modern Poetry
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- Paul Keen, Literature, Commerce, and the Spectacle of Modernity, 1750-1800
- Theresa M Kelley, Clandestine Marriage: Botany and Romantic Culture
- Tatiana Kontou and Sarah Willburn (eds), The Ashgate Research Companion to Nineteenth-Century Spiritualism and the Occult
- Clark Lawlor, From Melancholia to Prozac: A History of Depression
- Gregory Lynall, Swift and Science
- Shawn Malley, From Archaeology to Spectacle in Victorian Britain: The Case of Assyria, 1845-1854
- Clare Maniez (et al), Science and American Literature in the 20th and 21st Centuries
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- Elissa Marder, The Mother in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Psychoanalysis, Photography, Deconstruction
- Monica Matei-Chesnoiu, Re-imagining Western European Geography in English Renaissance Drama
- Asa Simon Mittman and Peter Dendle (eds.), The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous
- Catherine Packham, Eighteenth-Century Vitalism
- Michael Page, The Literary Imagination from Erasmus Darwin to H. G. Wells
- Stephen Pender and Nancy S. Struever (eds.), Rhetoric and Medicine in Early Modern Europe
- Stuart Peterfreund, Turning Points in Natural Theology from Bacon to Darwin: The Way of the Argument from Design
- Jennifer Phegley et al, (eds.), Transatlantic Sensations
- Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, Borges and Memory
- John Rignall et al (eds.), Ecology and the Literature of the British Left
- Sharon Ruston, Shelley and Vitality
- Anna Katharina Schaffner, Modernism and Perversion
- Anne Stiles, Popular Fiction and Brain Science in the Late Nineteenth Century
- Jonathan Strauss, Human Remains: Medicine, Death and Desire in Nineteenth-Century Paris
- Gregory Tate, The Poet's Mind
- Rebecca Totaro, The Plague Epic in Early Modern England
- Shelley Trower, Senses of Vibration
2013
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- Paul B. Armstrong, How Literature Plays with the Brain
- Jeannette Baxter, Valerie Henitiuk and Ben Hutchinson (eds), A Literature of Restitution. Critical Essays on W G Sebald
- Katharina Boehm, Charles Dickens and the Sciences of Childhood: Popular Medicine, Child Health and Victorian Culture
- Wyatt Bonikowski, Shell Shock and the Modernist Imagination: The Death Drive in Post-World War I British Fiction
- Simon de Bourcier, Pynchon and Relativity: Narrative Time in Thomas Pynchon's Later Novels
- Daniel Brown, The Poetry of Victorian Scientists: Style, Science and Nonsense
- Adelene Buckland, Novel Science
- Gavin Budge, Romanticism, Medicine and the Natural Supernatural: Transcendent Vision and Bodily Spectres, 1789-1852
- Caroline Crowley and Denis Linehan (eds), Spacing Ireland: Place, Society and Culture in a Post-Boom Era
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- Anne DeWitt, Moral Authority, Men of Science and the Victorian Novel
- Alexander Dick, Romanticism and the Gold Standard: Money, Literature and Economic Debate in Britain 1790-1830
- Monika Elbert and Bridget M. Marshall (eds), Transnational Gothic: Literary and Social Exchanges in the Long Nineteenth Century
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- Richard D Fulton and Peter H Hoffenberg (eds), Oceania and the Victorian Imagination: Where All Things Are Possible
- Evan Gottlieb and Juliet Shields (eds), Representing Place in British Literature and Culture, 1660–1830: From Local to Global
- Clare Hanson, Eugenics, Literature and Culture in Post-war Britain
- Graham Harrison, The African Presence: Representations of Africa in the Construction of Britishness
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- Jon Klancher, Transfiguring the Arts and Sciences: Knowledge and Cultural Institutions in the Romantic Age
- Christina Malcolmson, Studies of Skin Color in the Early Royal Society
- Ben Marsden et al (eds), Uncommon Contexts: Encounters Between Science and Literature, 1800-1914
- Dirk van Miert (ed), Communicating Observations in Early Modern Letters (1500-1675): Epistolography and Epistemology in the Age of the Scientific Revolution
- Sean Miller, Strung Together: The Cultural Currency of String Theory as a Scientific Imaginary
- Rosa Mucignat, Realism and Space in the Novel, 1795-1869: Imagined Geographies
- Valerie Purton (ed), Darwin, Tennyson and Their Readers: Explorations in Victorian Literature and Science
- Martin Priestman, The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin: Enlightened Spaces, Romantic Times
- A David Redish, The Mind Within the Brain: How We Make Decisions and how those Decisions Go Wrong
- Angelique Richardson (ed), After Darwin: Animals, Emotions, and the Mind
- Barbara K. Seeber, Jane Austen and Animals
- David Ward, Coleridge and the Nature of Imagination: Evolution, Engagement with the World, and Poetry
2014
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- Stefaan Blancke, Hans Henrik Hjermitslev, and Peter C. Kjærgaard (eds), foreword by Ronald L. Numbers, Creationism In Europe
- John Bruni, Scientific Americans: The Making of Popular Science and Evolution in Early-Twentieth-Century U.S. Literature and Culture
- Richard Cleminson, Catholicism, Race and Empire: Eugenics in Portugal, 1900-1950
- Dermot Coleman, George Eliot and Money: Economics, Ethics and Literature
- Mary Thomas Crane, Losing touch with Nature: Literature and the New Science in Sixteenth-Century England
- Chris Danta and Helen Groth (eds), Mindful Aesthetics: Literature and Science of the Mind
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- Jeremy Davies, Bodily Pain in Romantic Literature
- Katherine Ebury, Modernism & Cosmology: Absurd Lights
- Helena Feder, Ecocriticism and the Idea of Culture: Biology and the Bildungsroman
- Gary B. Ferngren, Medicine and Religion: a Historical Introduction
- Victoria Flanagan, Technology and Identity in Young Adult Fiction: The Posthuman Subject
- Kathleen Frederickson, The Ploy of Instinct: Victorian Sciences of Nature and Sexuality in Liberal Governance
- Ute Frevert et al., Emotional Lexicons: Continuity and Change in the Vocabulary of Feeling 1700-2000
- Mark Frost, The Lost Companions and John Ruskin’s Guild of St George: A Revisionary History
- Margareth Hagen and Margery Vibe Skagen, (eds.) Literature and Chemistry: Elective Affinities
- Dewey W. Hall, Romantic Naturalists, Early Environmentalists: An Ecocritical Study, 1789-1912
- Christopher Hamlin, More Than Hot: A Short History of Fever
- Anna Henchman, The Starry Sky Within: Astronomy and the Reach of the Mind in Victorian Literature
- Johan Höglund, The American Imperial Gothic: Popular Culture, Empire, Violence
- Heather Houser, Ecosickness in Contemporary U.S. Fiction: Environment and Affect
- Colin Jones, The Smile Revolution in Eighteenth-Century Paris
- Suzanne Keen, Thomas Hardy's Brains: Psychology, Neurology, and Hardy's Imagination
- Leah Knight, Reading Green in Early Modern England
- Anna Kornbluh, Realizing Capital: Financial and Psychic Economies in Victorian Form
- Bernard Lightman and Bennett Zon (eds.), Evolution and Victorian Culture
- David N. Livingstone, Dealing with Darwin: Place, Politics, and Rhetoric in Religious Engagements with Evolution
- Chad Luck, The Body of Property: Antebellum American Fiction and the Phenomenology of Possession
- Allen MacDuffie, Victorian Literature, Energy, and the Ecological Imagination
- Laura Marcus, Dreams of Modernity: Psychoanalysis, Literature, Cinema
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- Craig Martin, Subverting Aristotle: Religion, History and Philosophy in Early Modern Science
- Aris Mousoutzanis, Fin-de-Siѐcle Fictions, 1890s/1990s: Apocalypse, Technoscience, Empire
- Mona Narain and Karen Gevirtz (eds.), Gender and Space in British Literature, 1660-1820
- Xavier Aldana Reyes, Body Gothic: Corporeal Transgression in Contemporary Literature and Horrror Film
- Lorraine Ryan, Memory and Spatiality in Post-Millennial Spanish Narrative
- Kathryn St. Ours, Where Science and Literature Meet: The Earthy Writing of Jean-Loup Trassard
- Erik Parens, Shaping Our Selves: On Technology, Flourishing and a Habit of Thinking
- James Secord, Visions of Science: Books and Readers at the Dawn of the Victorian Age
- John Slater, Maríaluz López-Terrada and José Pardo-Tomás (eds), Medical Cultures of the Early Modern Spanish Empire
- Yasmin Solomonescu , John Thelwall and the Materialist Imagination
- David Spanagel, DeWitt Clinton and Amos Eaton: Geology and Power in Early New York
- Eckart Voigts, Barbara Schaff and Monika Pietrzak-Franger (eds.), Reflecting on Darwin
- Christina Walter, Optical Impersonality: Science, Images and Literary Modernism
2015
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- Will Abberley, English Fiction and the Evolution of Language, 1850-1914
- Sarah C Alexander, Victorian Literature and the Physics of the Imponderable
- Susanne Bach and Folkert Degenring (eds), Dark Nights, Bright Lights: Night, Darkness, and Illumination in Literature
- Teresa Barnard (ed.), British Women and the Intellectual World in the Long Eighteenth Century
- Kevin Binfield, ed, Writings of the Luddites
- Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg, The Player Piano and the Edwardian Novel
- Fred Botting and Catherine Spooner (eds), Monstrous Media/Spectral Subjects: Imaging Gothic from the Nineteenth Century to the Present
- Karen Bourrier, The Measure of Manliness: Disability and Masculinity in the Mid-Victorian Novel
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- Ronald R Kline, The Cybernetics Moment: Or Why We Call Our Age the Information Age
- Tim Lewens, Cultural Evolution: Conceptual Challenges
- Ewa Barbara Luczak, Breeding and Eugenics in the American Literary Imagination: Hereditary Rules in the Twentieth Century
- Peter Marks, Imagining Surveillance: Eutopian and Dystopian Literature and Film
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- Tobias Menely, The Animal Claim: Sensibility and the Creaturely Voice
- Peter Merchant and Catherine Waters (eds), Dickens and the Imagined Child
- Peter Middleton, Physics Envy: American Poetry and Science in the Cold War and After
- Jennifer Munro, Edward Geisweidt, and Lynne Bruckner (eds), Ecological Approaches to Early Modern English Texts: A Field Guide to Reading and Teaching
- Michael S. Pardo and Dennis Patterson, Minds, Brains, and Law: The Conceptual Foundations of Law and Neuroscience
- Patrick Parrinder, Utopian Literature and Science: From the Scientific Revolution to Brave New World and Beyond
- Brad Pasanek, Metaphors of Mind: An Eighteenth-Century Dictionary
- Margrit Pernau, Helge Jordhem et al., Civilizing Emotions. Concepts in Nineteenth-Century Asia and Europe
- B M Pietsch, Dispensational Modernism
- Alexander Pollatsek and Rebecca Treiman (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Reading
- Claire Preston, The Poetics of Scientific Investigation in Seventeenth-Century England
- Stephanie Shirilan, Robert Burton and the Transformative Powers of Melancholy
- Alanna Skuse, Constructions of Cancer in Early Modern England: Ravenous Natures
- Simon Smith, Jacqueline Watson and Amy Kenny (eds), The Senses in Early Modern England 1558-1660
- Paul Stephens, The Poetics of Information Overload: From Gertrude Stein to Conceptual Writing
- Nicolás Salazar Sutil and Sita Popat (eds.), Digital Movement: Essays in Motion Technology and Performance
- J P Telotte & Gerald Duchovnay, eds, Science Fiction, Double Feature: The Science Fiction Film as Cult Text
- Shelley Trower, Rocks of Nation: The Imagination of Celtic Cornwall
- Somogy Varga, Naturalism, Interpretation and Mental Disorder
- Miriam Wallraven, Women Writers and the Occult in Literature and Culture: Female Lucifers, Priestesses, and Witches
- Jon Whitman (ed.), Romance and History: Imagining Time from the Medieval to the Early Modern Period
- Maria Zarimis, Darwin’s Footprint: Cultural Perspectives on Evolution in Greece (1880-1930s)
2016
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- Zygmunt Bauman and Riccardo Mazzeo, In Praise of Literature
- Gillian Beer, Alice in Space: The Sideways Victorian World of Lewis Carroll
- John Beck and Ryan Bishop (eds), Cold War Legacies: Systems, Theory, Aesthetics
- Ulrich Beck, The Metamorphosis of the World: How Climate Change Is Transforming Our Concept of the World
- Josie Billington, Is Literature Healthy?
- David Bradshaw, Laura Marcus, Rebecca Roach (eds), Moving Modernisms: Motion, Technology, and Modernity
- Paul Budra and Clifford Werier (eds), Shakespeare and Consciousness
- Peter Burke, What Is the History of Knowledge?
- Ritch Calvin, Feminist Science Fiction and Feminist Epistemology: Four Modes
- Julia S. Carlson, Romantic Marks and Measures: Wordsworth’s Poetry in Fields of Print
- Terence Cave, Thinking with Literature: Towards a Cognitive Criticism
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- Tina Young Choi, Anonymous Connections: The Body and Narratives of the Social in Victorian Britain
- Lucinda Cole, Imperfect Creatures: Vermin, Literature and the Sciences of Life, 1600-1740
- Al Coppola, The Theater of Experiment: Staging Natural Philosophy in Eighteenth-Century Britain
- Adriana Craciun, Writing Arctic Disaster: Authorship and Exploration
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- Gowan Dawson, Show Me the Bone: Reconstructing Prehistoric Monsters in Nineteenth-Century Britain and America
- Matthew Escobar, The Persistence of the Human: Consciousness, Meta-body and Survival in Contemporary Film and Literature
- Molly Farrell, Counting Bodies: Population in Colonial American Writing
- Marc Flandreau, Anthropologists in the Stock Exchange: a Financial History of Victorian Britain
- Jane Ford, Kim Edwards Keates, and Patricia Pulham (eds), Economies of Desire at the Victorian Fin de Siècle: Libidinal Lives
- Peter Garratt (ed), The Cognitive Humanities: Embodied Mind in Literature and Culture
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- Claire Hanson, Gerri Kimber and Todd Martin (eds), Katherine Mansfield and Psychology
- Graham Harman, Immaterialism: Objects and Social Theory
- Debra Hawhee, Rhetoric in Tooth and Claw: Animals, Language, Sensation
- Judy A, Hayden (ed.), Literature in the Age of Celestial Discovery: From Copernicus to Flamsteed
- Ursula K. Heise, Imagining Extinction: The Cultural Meanings of Endangered Species
- Julie Holledge, Jonathan Bollen, Frode Helland, and Joanne Tompkins, A Global Doll’s House: Ibsen and Distant Visions
- Allan Ingram and Leigh Wetherall Dickson (eds.), Disease and Death in Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture: Fashioning the Unfashionable
- David Kaiser and W Patrick McCray, eds, Groovy Science: Knowledge, Innovation and American Counterculture
- Eric R Kandel, Reductionism in Art and Brain Science: Bridging the Two Cultures
- Colin Kidd, The World of Mr Casaubon: Britain's Wars of Mythography, 1700-1870
- Jordan Kistler, Arthur O’Shaughnessy, A Pre-Raphaelite Poet in the British Museum
- Karin Koehler, Thomas Hardy and Victorian Communication: Letters, Telegrams and Postal Systems
- Jonathan Lamb, Scurvy: The Disease of Discovery
- Deborah Lupton, The Quantified Self
- Luke Morgan, The Monster in the Garden: The Grotesque and the Gigantic in Renaissance Landscape Design
- Daniel Morris, Not Born Digital: Poetics, Print Literacy, New Media
- Timothy Morton, Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence
- Marie Mulvey-Roberts, Dangerous Bodies: Historicising the Gothic Corporeal
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- Rick Rylance, Literature and the Public Good
- Rebecca P. Scales, Radio and the Politics of Sound in Interwar France, 1921-1939
- Anna Katharina Schaffner, Exhaustion: A History
- Scott Selisker, Human Programming: Brainwashing, Automatons and American Unfreedom
- Roberto Simanowski, Data Love: The Seduction and Betrayal of Digital Technologies
- Andrew Sloane, Vulnerability and Care: Christian Reflections on the Philosophy of Medicine
- Tom Solomon, Roald Dahl’s Marvellous Medicine
- Jessica Straley, Evolution and Imagination in Victorian Children's Literature
- Rajani Sudan, The Alchemy of Empire: Abject Materials and the Technologies of Colonialism
- Kelly Sultzbach, Ecocriticism in the Modernist Imagination: Forster, Woolf, and Auden
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- Will Tattersdill, Science, Fiction and the Fin-de-Siècle Periodical Press
- David Thorley, Writing Illness and Identity in Seventeenth-Century Britain
- Susan L. Trollinger and William Vance Trollinger, Jr., Righting America at the Creation Museum
- Maureen Tuthill, Health and Sickness in the Early American Novel: Social Affection and Eighteenth-Century Medicine
- Corinna Wagner and Andy Brown (eds), A Body of Work: An Anthology of Poetry and Medicine
- Leif Weatherby, Transplanting the Metaphysical Organ: German Romanticism between Leibniz and Marx
- Wendy Wheeler, Expecting the Earth: Life, Culture, Biosemiotics
- Anne Whitehead and Angela Woods (eds), The Edinburgh Companion to the Critical Medical Humanities
- Matthew Wickman, Literature After Euclid: The Geometric Imagination in the Long Scottish Enlightenment
- Martin Willis (ed), Staging Science: Scientific Performance on Street, Stage and Screen
- Jessica Winston, Lawyers at Play: Literature, Law, and Politics at the Early Modern Inns of Court, 1558-1581
- Elizabeth Yale, Sociable Knowledge: Natural History and the Nation in Early Modern Britain
- Hubert Zapf, Literature as Cultural Ecology: Sustainable Texts
2017
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- Rachel Ablow, Victorian Pain
- Kenneth Asher, Literature, Ethics, and the Emotions
- Melissa Bailes, Questioning Nature. British Women’s Scientific Writing & Literary Originality 1750-1830
- Clare Barker and Stuart Murray (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Disability
- Peter J. Bowler, A History of the Future: Prophets of Progress from H. G. Wells to Isaac Asimov
- Clare Brant, Balloon Madness: Flights of Imagination in Britain, 1783-1786
- Ron Broglio, Beasts of Burden: Biopolitics, Labor, and Animal Life in British Romanticism
- Nathan Brown, The Limits of Fabrication: Materials Science, Materialist Poetics
- Michael Burke and Emily T Troscianko (eds), Cognitive Literary Science: Dialogues between Literature and Cognition
- Bronwen Calvert, Being Bionic: The World of TV Cyborgs
- Alison A Chapman, The Legal Epic: Paradise Lost and the Early Modern Law
- Bruce Clarke and Manuela Rossini (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Literature and the Posthuman
- Daniel Cordle, Late Cold War Literature and Culture: The Nuclear 1980s
- Megan Coyer, Literature, Medicine and the Nineteenth-Century Periodical Press: Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 1817–1858
- Hillary Eklund, (ed), Ground-Work: English Renaissance Literature and Soil Science
- Mary Fairclough, Literature, Electricity and Politics 1740-1840: 'Electrick Communication Every Where'
- Michael R. Finn, Figures of the Pre-Freudian Unconscious from Flaubert to Proust
- J D Fleming, The Mirror of Information in Early Modern England: John Wilkins and the Universal Character
- Andrew Gaedtke, Modernism and the Machinery of Madness: Psychosis, Technology, and Narrative Worlds
- Michael Gamer, Romanticism, Self-Canonization, and the Business of Poetry
- Marlene Goldman, Forgotten: Narratives of Age-Related Dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease in Canada
- Amanda Jo Goldstein, Sweet Science: Romantic Materialism and the New Logics of Life
- Matthew Griffiths, The New Poetics of Climate Change: Modernist Aesthetics for a Warming World
- Jason D. Hall, Nineteenth-Century Verse and Technology: Machines of Meter
- Richard Halpern, Eclipse of Action: Tragedy and Political Economy
- Claire Hansen, Shakespeare and Complexity Theory
- N. Katherine Hayles, Unthought: The Power of the Cognitive Nonconscious
- Roslynn D. Haynes, From Madman to Crime Fighter: The Scientist in Western Culture
- Ursula K Heise, Jon Christensen and Michelle Niemann (eds), The Routledge Companion to the Environmental Humanities
- Ian Hesketh, Victorian Jesus: J.R. Seeley, Religion, and the Cultural Significance of Anonymity
- John Holmes and Sharon Ruston (eds), The Routledge Research Companion to Nineteenth-Century British Literature and Science
- Lorna Hutson (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of English Law and Literature, 1500-1700
- Nathaniel Isaacson, Celestial Empire: the Emergence of Chinese Science Fiction
- Lara Karpenko and Shalyn Claggett (eds), Strange Science: Investigating the Limits of Knowledge in the Victorian Age
- Lana Lin, Freud’s Jaw and Other Lost Objects: Fractured Subjectivity in the Face of Cancer
- Michael Lundblad (ed.), Animalities: Literary and Cultural Studies Beyond the Human
- Howard Marchitello and Evelyn Tribble (eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Early Modern Literature and Science
- Catherine Maxwell, Scents and Sensibility: Perfume in Victorian Literary Culture
- Paula McDowell, The Invention of the Oral: Print Commerce and Fugitive Voices in Eighteenth-Century Britain
- Wendy Moore, The Mesmerist: The Society Doctor Who Held Victorian London Spellbound
- Benjamin Morgan, The Outward Mind: Materialist Aesthetics in Victorian Science
- Mark S Morrisson, Modernism, Science, and Technology
- Gary Saul Morson and Morton Owen Schapiro, Cents and Sensibility: What Economics Can Learn from the Humanities
- Jesse Olsynko-Gryn and Patrick Ellis, The British Journal for the History of Science, Special Issue: Reproduction on Film
- Monika Pietrzak-Franger, Syphilis in Victorian Literature and Culture: Medicine, Knowledge, and the Spectacle of Invisibility
- Sarah M Pourciau, The Writing of Spirit: Soul, System and the Roots of Language Science
- Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, The Forgetting Machine: Memory, Perception, and the Jennifer Aniston Neuron
- Robert Lanier Reid, Renaissance Psychologies: Spenser and Shakespeare
- John Rieder, Science Fiction and the Mass Cultural Genre System
- Douglas Robinson, Translationality: Essays in the Translational-Medical Humanities
- Nicholas Roe (ed.), John Keats and the Medical Imagination
- Matthew Wilson Smith, The Nervous Stage: Nineteenth-century Neuroscience and the Birth of Modern Theater
- Sam Solnick, Poetry and the Anthropocene: Ecology, Biology and Technology in Contemporary British and Irish Poetry
- Kirsten Strom, The Animal Surreal: The Role of Darwin, Animals, and Evolution in Surrealism
- Robert T Tally Jr (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Literature and Space
- Anne M. Thell, Minds in Motion: Imagining Empiricism in Eighteenth-Century British Travel Writing
- Elizabeth L. Throesch, Before Einstein: The Fourth Dimension in Fin-de-Siècle Literature and Culture
- Heather Tilley, Blindness and Writing: From Wordsworth to Gissing
- Tuire Valkeakari, Precarious Passages: The Diasporic Imagination in Contemporary Black Anglophone Fiction
- Lena Wånggren, Gender, Technology and the New Woman
- Anna West, Thomas Hardy and Animals
- Janina Wellmann, The Form of Becoming. Embryology and the Epistemology of Rhythm, 1760-1830
- Laura White, The Alice Books and the Contested Ground of the Natural World
- Anne Whitehead, Medicine and Empathy in Contemporary British Fiction: an Intervention in Medical Humanities
- James Whitehead, Madness and the Romantic Poet: A Critical History
- D. Harlan Wilson, J.G. Ballard
- Bennett Zon, Evolution and Victorian Musical Culture
2018
- Richard Adelman, Idleness and Aesthetic Consciousness, 1815-1900
- Mark Blacklock, The Emergence of the Fourth Dimension: Higher Spatial Thinking in the Fin de Siècle
- Bruce Boehrer, Molly Hand, and Brian Massumi, eds, Animals and Animality
- Chris Danta, Animal Fables After Darwin: Literature, Speciesism, and Metaphor
- Jennifer Fay, Inhospitable World: Cinema in the Time of the Anthropocene
- Jonathan Foltz, The Novel after Film: Modernism and the Decline of Autonomy
- Tom Furniss, Discovering the Footsteps of Time: Geological Travel Writing about Scotland, 1700-1820
- Caroline Hovanec, Animal Subjects: Literature, Zoology, and British Modernism
- J Andrew Hubbell, Byron’s Nature: A Romantic Vision of Cultural Ecology
- Helena Ifill, Creating Character: Theories of Nature and Nurture in Victorian Sensation Fiction
- Michael Jonik, Herman Melville and the Politics of the Inhuman
- Ruta Baublyté Kaufmann, The Architecture of Space-Time in the Novels of Jane Austen
- Eike Kronshage, Vision and Character: Physiognomics and the English Realist Novel
- Annika Mann, Reading Contagion: The Hazards of Reading in the Age of Print
- Daniel McCann and Claire McKechnie-Mason (eds), Fear in the Medical and Literary Imagination, Medieval to Modern: Dreadful Passions
- Steven Meyer, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Science
- Heidi C. M. Scott, Fuel: An Ecocritical History
- Alex Tankard, Tuberculosis and Disabled Identity in Nineteenth Century Literature: Invalid Lives
- Michael Tondre, The Physics of Possibility: Victorian Fiction, Science, and Gender
- Kerim Yasar, Electrified Voices: How the Telephone, Phonograph and Radio Shaped Modern Japan, 1868–1945
- Charles Morris Lansley, Charles Darwin’s Debt to the Romantics: How Alexander von Humboldt, Goethe and Wordsworth Helped Shape Darwin’s View of Nature
2019
- Michael J. Benton, The Dinosaurs Rediscovered: How a Scientific Revolution is Rewriting History
- Todd Andrew Borlik, Literature and Nature in the English Renaissance: An Ecocritical Anthology
- Timothy Clark, The Value of Ecocriticism
- Mark Foster Gage (ed.), Aesthetics Equals Politics: New Discourses Across Art, Architecture, and Philosophy
- Axel Goodbody and Adeline Johns-Putra (eds), Cli-Fi: A Companion
- Hanan Muzaffar and Barbara Braid (eds), Bodies in Flux: Embodiments at the End of Anthropocentrism
2020
- Carmen Concilio (ed.), Imagining Ageing: Representations of Age and Ageing in Anglophone Literatures
- Dennis B. Downey and James W. Conroy, Pennhurst and the Struggle for Disability Rights
- Laura Forsberg, Worlds Beyond: Miniatures and Victorian Fiction
- Lindsey Joyce and Víctor Navarro-Remesal (eds), Culture at Play: How Video Games Influence and Replicate Our World
- Susanne Jung, Bouncing Back: Queer Resilience in Twentieth and Twenty-First Century English Literature and Culture
- Gregory Lynall, Imagining Solar Energy: The Power of the Sun in Literature, Science and Culture
- Gemma Milne, Smoke & Mirrors: How Hype Obscures the Future and How to See Past It
- Kieran M. Murphy, Electromagnetism and the Metonymic Imagination
- Özden Sözalan and Inci Bilgin Tekin (eds), Environment and Fiction: Critical Readings
- Karen Laura Thornber, Global Healing: Literature, Advocacy, Care
2021
2022
- Natalie Berkman, OuLiPo and the Mathematics of Literature
- S. Pearl Brilmyer, The Science of Character: Human Objecthood and the Ends of Victorian Realism
- Marija Grech, Spectrality and Survivance: Living the Anthropocene
- Adeline Johns-Putra and Kelly Sultzbach (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Climate
- Michael Wainwright, Literature, Parasitism, and Science: The Untold Worms of Stoker, Stevenson, and Doyle
- Martina Zamparo, Alchemy, Paracelsianism, and Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale
- Robert Zaretsky, Victories Never Last: Reading and Caregiving in a Time of Plague
2023
- Marie Allitt, Medical Caregiving Narratives of the First World War: Geographies of Care
- Andy Brown, The Tree Climbing Cure: Finding Wellbeing in Trees in European and North American Literature and Art
- D. Graham Burnett and Justin E. H. Smith (eds), Scenes of Attention: Essays on Mind, Time, and the Senses
- Fred Cooper, Luna Dolezal, and Arthur Rose, COVID-19 and Shame: Political Emotions and Public Health in the UK
- Nicole C. Dittmer and Sophie Raine (eds), Penny Dreadfuls and the Gothic: Investigations of Pernicious Tales of Terror
- Jennifer Flaherty and Deborah Uman, eds. Liberating Shakespeare: Adaptation and Empowerment for Young Adult Audiences: Shakespeare and Adaptation
- Angus Fletcher, Storythinking: The New Science of Narrative Intelligence
- Hannah Freed-Thall, Modernism at the Beach
- Chloe Germaine, The Dark Matter of Children’s ‘Fantastika’ Literature: Speculative Entanglements
- Alice Hall (ed.), Contemporary Literature and the Body: A Critical Introduction
- Sarah Hart, Once Upon a Prime: The Wondrous Connections Between Mathematics and Literature
- Lafcadio Hearn, Insect Literature
- Allan V. Horwitz, Personality Disorders: A Short History of Narcissistic, Borderline, Antisocial, and Other Types
- Paul Matthews, Transparent Minds in Science Fiction: An Introduction to Alien, AI and Post-Human Consciousness
- Stuart Murray, Medical Humanities and Disability Studies: In/Disciplines
- Joan Passey, Cornish Gothic, 1830-1912
- Curtis Runstedler, Alchemy and Exemplary Poetry in Middle English Literature
- Stefan Schöberlein, Writing the Brain: Material Minds and Literature, 1800–1880
- Debra Benita Shaw, Women, Science and Fiction Revisited
- Leah Sidi, Sarah Kane's Theatre of Psychic Life
- Jolene Zigarovitch, Death and the Body in the Eighteenth-Century Novel
2024