Spufford started publishing in 1960 and had already published two smaller books and ten articles before her most influential book
Contrasting Communities was published in 1974. It has been kept continuously in print ever since. It changed the way that historians looked at local communities in early modern England. Her next important book,
Small Books and Pleasant Histories: Popular Fiction and its Readership in Seventeenth Century England, was published in 1981 and it too has been kept continuously in print ever since It made people aware of the extent of literacy in rural England and what there was for rural readers to read. As a consequence it brought to the attention of historians of English literature the immense quantity of ephemeral literature that underpinned the literary canon. She later extended her work on education and literacy from rural England to other parts of Europe. Her next landmark book,
The Great Reclothing of Rural England, came out in 1984. It brought the attention of historians to the chapmen who toured rural England before the proliferation of shops, carrying with them the essential linens for clothing and a range of haberdashery and other small objects, including small books. This has produced similar studies in other parts of Europe. Spufford's next book,
The World of Rural Dissenters, 1520-1725, was published in 1995. It was an attempt with a number of her research students to look at the continuity and social range of dissent in rural England from the Lollards to the early 18th century. She herself contributed an introductory chapter, a small book in itself, summarising her particular views on the importance of religion in the 16th and 17th centuries. Her
Poverty Portrayed also appeared in 1995. It tied together documents about rural poverty with paintings by the two
Egbert van Heemskercks, father and son, portraying rural society in Holland and England. In 1995, she began the British Academy Hearth Tax project, at the University of Roehampton, which launched a series of edited texts, with critical introductions of the hearth tax records of late 17th century England. In 2000 many of her articles were republished in
Figures in the Landscape, Rural Society in England 1500-1700. ==Later life==