Sarah Wall-Randell is Associate Professor of English at Wellesley College. She is the author of The Immaterial Book: Reading and Romance in Early Modern England (University of Michigan Press, 2013); she has also published several essays and book chapters on early modern editing practices, books as stage-props, Sibylline prophecy, and Marlowe, including “Marlowe’s Lucan: Winding Sheets and Scattered Leaves,” in Christopher Marlowe, Theatrical Commerce, and the Book Trade, ed. Roslyn Knutson and Kirk Melnikoff (Cambridge, 2018). She is currently at work on a monograph about women as textual transmitters and gatekeepers, focusing on Mary, Countess of Pembroke.