University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 232
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-61148-048-1 • Hardback • September 2011 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
978-1-61148-049-8 • eBook • April 2011 • $119.50 • (£92.00)
Richard J. Jones is an editor and associate lecturer with the Open University in the U.K.
1 Acknowledgments
2 Abbreviations
3 Introduction
4 i. Smollett and the Enlightenment in Glasgow
5 ii. Travels through France and Italy
6 iii. Attribution
7 Chapter One: A Physical Gentleman
8 i. Smollett and Medicine
9 ii. Water
10 iii. Natural History
11 Chapter Two: A Good Critic
12 i. Smollett and the Fine Arts
13 ii. Francis Hutcheson and Thomas Reid
14 iii. Adam Smith
15 Chapter Three: A Theatrical Divine
16 i. Smollett and the Theatre
17 ii. Novels and Performances
18 iii. Carnival
19 Chapter Four: A Friend of Virtue
20 i. Smollett and History
21 ii. David Hume and the Stuarts
22 iii. George III
23 Conclusion
24 Bibliography
The shelf of scholarly monographs on Smollett is short: the only important works in English in recent decades are James Basker's Tobias Smollett, Critic and Journalist (1988), Aileen Douglas's Uneasy Sensations: Smollett and the Body (CH, Jan'96, 33-2591), Jerry C. Beasley's Tobias Smollett, Novelist (1998), and William Gibson's Art and Money in the Writings of Tobias Smollett (2006). A new work on such a major author is therefore welcome. Jones (Open Univ., UK) uses Smollett's travel book, Travels through France and Italy, as a starting point for a series of investigations of the connections between the Scottish writer's works and the Scottish Enlightenment. There are chapters on medicine (Smollett was a physician), literary criticism, drama, and history. This attractive, clearly written volume will be valuable for anyone interested in Smollett's multifarious career, and also for those who study 18th-century travel writing and Scottish intellectual life. Summing Up: Recommended.
— Choice Reviews