1. Anderson, A. (2012). Snake Oil, Hustlers, and Hambones: The American Medicine Show. McFarland, Jefferson, NC.
2. Bair, J. (2009). Frontiers of Commodity Chain Research. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA.
3. Berman, A. (1980). The eclectic "concentrations" and American pharmacy (1847-1861). Pharmacy in History 22(3): 91-103.
4. Brown, F. M. (2015). "Good for What Ailed You" in Springfield, Illinois: Embossed Pharmaceutical Bottles Used by Springfield Druggists from the Civil War Era to the Early Twentieth Century. Illinois State Archaeological Survey Press, Champaign.
5. Christensen, K. (2013). Troubling the domestic sphere: women reformers and the changing place of the home in the United States, 1854–1939. In Spencer-Wood, S. (ed.), Historical and Archaeological Perspectives on Gender Transformations: From Private to Public. Springer, New York, pp. 63–83.