Solopova's 2005 bookThe Keys of Middle-Earth, written withStuart D. Lee, on Tolkien'smedieval sources for his fantasy writings, was warmly received by scholars, though they found some issues with it. It is her most-cited work.[7] It has been described as an excellent introduction, both for students to use as a text and as a resource for instructors, and an interesting sidelight on the linguistic issues that so fascinated Tolkien.[8] Scholars have praised it as a well-chosen selection of texts and a well-researched introduction to both Tolkien's career and the study of medieval languages.[9] Others have noted that it excludesThe Silmarillion, which would have demanded the FinnishKalevala.[10] As a student text, its medieval fragments are well-introduced but too short for most academic purposes.[11]
Solopova's 2007 bookKey Concepts in Medieval Literature, also written with Stuart D. Lee, has been praised as a scholarly introduction with essays at a level suitable for undergraduates and helpful recommendations for further reading. The literature is however exclusively English.[12]
She has written or edited the following books:[13]
2000Chaucer: The General Prologue
2005The Keys of Middle-Earth: Discovering Medieval Literature through the Fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien
2009Languages, Myths and History: An Introduction to the Linguistic and Literary Background of J. R. R. Tolkien's Fiction
2007Key Concepts in Medieval Literature
2015Latin Liturgical Psalters in the Bodleian Library: A Select Catalogue – a catalogue of 111 liturgicalpsalters from theBodleian Library, with details ofbookbinding, decoration, and text.[14]
2016The Wycliffite Bible: Origin, History and Interpretation
2020From the Vulgate to the Vernacular: Four Debates on an English Question c. 1450 (editor, with J. Catto and A. Hudson)
^Toswell, M. J. (2015). "Reviews: Elizabeth Solopova, Latin Liturgical Psalters in the Bodleian Library: A Select Catalogue".Speculum.90 (1):298–299.doi:10.1017/S0038713414002991.