“One of the hallmarks of this wide ranging and erudite book is the literary authority Wootton brings to the endeavor. She makes a glancing mention of Woolf’s Night and Day (1919) … for example, but does so with concision, thereby providing the reader with an overview of themes in nineteenth-century literature. … Wootton shows how women novelists rejected the ‘vulgar Byronic personality’ while adopting his ‘narrative agility and robust ideas,’ as they experimented with genre and form.” (Jonathan Gross, European Romantic Review, Vol. 29 (04), 2018)“Wootton provides both substantive and nuanced analysis of the literary and film/television texts chosen for the book, and the absence of certain texts may besimply a matter of space. … Throughout each section of the book, Wootton is strongly engaged with critics of Romantic and Victorian literature as well as film critics and reviewers who tracked the popularity of the various adaptations. Studies of literary influence can sometimes feel forced, but that is not the case here.” (Cheryl A. Wilson, Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature, Vol. 37 (1), 2018)“This is an informative monograph which prompts a re-thinking of Byron’s ambivalent legacies. Elegantly written and impeccably researched, Wootton’s study will be valuable to any scholars, students, or general readers interested in both the Romantic and the Victorian age as well as in the Byron phenomenon more broadly, and in twenty-first century media and film studies. … the book takes on a subject that we thought we knew all about and discovers something fresh to say about it.” (Carmen Casaliggi, Byron Journal, Vol. 45 (1), 2017)