1. Allen, David. Commonplace books and reading in Georgian England. Cambridge University Press, 2010.
2. Anonymous. A fable founded upon fact, translated from a manuscript, found in an old castle, May 10th, 1784; and supposed to be originally written by a great grandson of Lemuel Gulliver. [London?], 1784. Eighteenth Century Collections Online.
3. Anonymous. The perquisite-Monger: or the rise and fall of ingratitude. Being one of the stories, which the monks of Godstow were formerly wont to divert fair Rosamond with, and which may serve to clear up several absurdities in The history of Prince Mirabel. Made Publick from an Original Manuscript lately found in the Ruines of Woodstock-Bower. London, 1712. Eighteenth Century Collections Online.
4. Anonymous. A succinct account of the person, the way of living, and of the court of the King of Prussia. Translated from a curious manuscript in French, found in the cabinet of the late Field Marshal Keith. London, 1759. Eighteenth Century Collections Online.
5. Another Lady [Marie Dobbs/Anne Telscombe]. Sanditon: Jane Austen’s Last Novel Completed (New York: Scribner, 1998).