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"This carefully researched study provides the first extended analysis of criminal forgery in Victorian literature. While others have examined forgery as a metaphor for fraudulent literary commerce, Malton shows how the crime of forgery haunts the plots of Victorian novels. By examining the interplay between a changing legal regime and the fictional representations it provoked and responded to, Malton makes an important contribution to research in law and literature." - Simon Stern, Faculty of Law & Department of English, University of Toronto
"Malton has written a provocative, thoughtful, and engaging book that makes a solid case for giving forgery its due critical respect. Focusing on the metaphorical elements of her topic, her approach offers vivid, resonant readings of novels by Gaskell, Dickens, Trollope, Hardy, Wilde, and Arthur Conan Doyle. Malton's book contributes meaningfully to the growing canon of Victorian financial criticism and has made this reader eager to know still more." - Rebecca Stern, University of South Carolina, Victorian Studies (Volume 52, Number 1)