Abstract
This is the first complete collection of the correspondence of Hobbes and as such fills an important gap in the published writing of the man who is probably the most important political philosopher of the modern age. Noel Malcolm has done an admirable job of assembling and annotating the correspondence. The work contains complete critical apparatus including a detailed index, an extensive bibliography, and a biographical register providing a short description of each of Hobbes's correspondents. Each entry is printed in the original language as well as in English translation. While this pushes the edition over into two volumes, it is certainly well justified in making the work useful for professional philosophers as well as accessible to students. The letters are transcribed as precisely as possible, including margin notes and interliniations. The editor also shows good judgement in excluding certain treatises which appear in epistolary form but which have previously appeared in print.