When Albert Jay Nock was the editor of The Freeman, he made a point, whenever a contributor was especially well known, to not draw special attention to said contributor's byline. So George Bernard Shaw's byline would be simply George B. Shaw. Nock thought the article should be judged by what it said, not by the celebrity of its author.
Those who insist that reviews be written by "name" or "credentialed" reviewers would of course disagree.
Those who insist that reviews be written by "name" or "credentialed" reviewers would of course disagree.
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