Reviewing Reid's book
Women in Science Fiction and Fantasy, K. A. Laity wrote that it is an "immense, glossy reference book ... aimed at the library market", with a scope spanning both academic and fan sources. Benjamin Lawson writes of Reid's
Ray Bradbury: A Critical Companion that it succeeds in being useful to the general reader, having been designed as an introduction for young adults. Lawson finds the "Alternative Perspectives" section at the end of the analysis of each of
Bradbury's books "the chief novelty and sophistication" of this particular
Companion. In the space of three pages each, these sections give an update on recent theory, including in some cases
gender or "more daringly"
queer theory. ==Books==