This is a stimulating book. The “unimpressed” reviews by others strike me as either not fully attentive to Spiegel’s considerable efforts to lay out her position, or otherwise the result of very selective reading… This latter suspicion arises from the fact that Spiegel explicitly disavows features of postmodernism that she sees as unproductive, unconvincing, or existentially threatening to the practice of History. The theoretical chapters are dedicated to making these points clear, while the chapters on method & interpretation directly invoke said theoretical groundwork. She cogently and convincingly argues that while postmodernism’s influence on various disciplines led to some groundbreaking work and to important challenges for historians, we nevertheless need a theoretical and methodological “middle ground” in History somewhere between the far reaches of postmodernism on the one hand and of positivism on the other. Critiques or extensions of the specific features of the “middle ground” for which she argues, or of her advancement of “the social logic of the text,” may be warranted and necessary. Flippant mischaracterizations of her work are not. There are other merits of this book worth discussing, especially the penultimate chapter on social change and literary language in 13th-century France, but I wanted to emphasize my reaction to earlier reviews lest others are unduly put off by unfair assessments of this generative collection of essays.