Ilaria Frana’s book on Concealed Questions has just been published by Oxford University Press. The book grew out of Ilaria’s 2010 UMass dissertation. From the publisher’s description: “This book presents a novel analysis of concealed-question constructions, reports of a mental attitude in which part of a sentence looks like a nominal complement (e.g. Eve’s phone number in Adam knows Eve’s phone number), but is interpreted as an indirect question (Adam knows what Eve’s phone number is). Such constructions are puzzling in that they raise the question of how their meaning derives from their constituent parts. In particular, how a nominal complement (Eve’s phone number), normally used to refer to an entity (e.g. Eve’s actual phone number in Adam dialled Eve’s phone number) ends up with a question-like meaning.”