%0 Journal Article %A Thomas Willard %D 2022 %C Berlin, Germany %I Peter Lang Verlag %J Mediaevistik %@ 2199-806X %N 1 %V 34 %T D. Vance Smith, . Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2020, 10, 299 pp., 2 b&w ill. %R 10.3726/med.2021.01.18 %U https://www.peterlang.com/document/1238889 %X D. Vance Smith’s new book is an unusual one in several ways. The Acknowledgments, often placed first in academic books, are relegated to a position between the last chapter and the end notes. Meanwhile, the Preface acknowledges that the author’s chief debts are to the psychologist and psychiatrist who, along with his wife, kept him alive as he struggled with the medieval poems about death. For Smith was also struggling with his own undiagnosed bipolar disorder, which “nearly brought me [i.e., him] to an end.” The licensed psychologist he saw regularly is the person to whom he dedicates the book; he likens her to Reason in the medieval French