At the urging of J. Gordon Melton, three researchers have produced a comprehensive bibliography on the history of Christian Science (CS) directed at scholars and academics. The bibliography includes a listing of books and articles in theology, biography, governance, feminism, healing, and other topics. Each individual entry comprises bibliographic information and a narrative ranging from about eighty to two hundred words that is not only descriptive but frequently analytical. A section on primary sources highlights CS periodicals, the Longyear Museum, and the Mary Baker Eddy Library, while three full-length articles conclude the volume in order “to demonstrate the range, depth, and diversity of the works represented in the Annotated Bibliography” (294).The first section locates CS within the context of Christianity, although its debt to New Thought, Western Esotericism, and metaphysical religion is chronicled as well. Not surprisingly, authors and articles published in Nova Religio appear in this section and are, indeed, peppered throughout the volume. But there are surprises as well, such as David Porter’s book on Willa Cather that details the unconscious debt to Eddy that Cather exhibits in her writings. The section on Independent Christian Scientists also offers an unusual perspective by presenting the voices of those who had severed ties with CS, though not with some of its teachings. This section differs from that on polemic literature, which lists blatantly oppositional works, such as Walter Martin’s Kingdom of the Cults, although Mark Twain’s savage account of CS appears in a different section. The role that CS has played in determining boundaries for the separation of church and state is addressed in the section on healing.This bibliography will be extremely helpful to those researching Christian Science, New Thought, or church-state relations, to list just a few topics. The authors plan to provide updates and new material through an online version.