- Reading at Home: Emily Dickinson's Domestic Contexts
- Introduction by Gabrielle Dean
- “I am glad there are Books. They are better than Heaven”: Religious Texts in the Dickinson Family Libraries by Jane Wald
- Letters to the World: Popular Manuscript Circulation in the Nineteenth Century and Emily Dickinson’s Handwritten Verse by Thomas Lawrence Long
- “The Last Rose of Summer”: How Emily Dickinson Read and Rewrote the Favorite Song of the Nineteenth Century by Gabrielle Dean
- Contributors
Reading at Home: Emily Dickinson's Domestic Contexts
Images from:
- Ellen Rice’s autograph album, Gen MSS File 256 (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University)
- A. Mine, “The Last Rose of Summer, With Easy Variations,” Boston: George P. Reed [18--], from [Music: a bound volume of miscellaneous sheet music, without title page / with Emily Dickinson's name written on flyleaf], Dickinson family library, EDR 469 (Houghton Library, Harvard University)
- Painted flower from unidentified friendship album (Litchfield Historical Society)
- Cover of Emily Dickinson's Bible, Philadelphia, 1843, Dickinson family library, EDR 8 (Houghton Library, Harvard University)