An exacting snapshot of public scholarship in the Victorian heart of London. Essential for scholars and collectors. Compiled by John Winter Jones, this nineteenth-century historical book catalog records the reference holdings of the British Museum reference collection and reads as a working museum reading room guide for anyone engaged in serious study. Far from a mere inventory, it functions as a library bibliography anthology that reveals the intellectual map of an era: which reference works fuelled debate and how research reference books were marshalled for immediate consultation. The plain, methodical listings make visible the discipline mix - Victorian era literature sitting alongside law, science and theology - and provide a direct line into London library history. Casual readers will pick up evocative traces of the city's reading culture; bibliographers, librarians and students will find a durable academic library resource for provenance, reception and institutional research. Researchers reconstructing reading lists and tracing the provenance of holdings will find it especially instructive; its measured entries point to how the museum balanced general reference with specialised works. As a companion to studies of Victorian publishing and collecting, it complements literary histories and curatorial records, and it remains a practical index for anyone exploring British literary resources in their historical context. Its historical importance is straightforward: among nineteenth century bibliographies it is a primary witness to the priorities and procedures of a major public institution, useful to anyone studying acquisition patterns or the development of British literary resources. Collectors of rare books and those using a book collectors guide will find provenance cues and period context; curators and historians will read it as evidence of how the Reading Room organised access to knowledge. The book also speaks to the wider civic story of public education in London: it reveals how a national collection served scholars and curious citizens alike and how reference practice underpinned intellectual life across Britain. For casual readers, collectors of rare books and academic users, the volume is at once a document and a guide. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.