'Intellectually exploratory and written with admirable clarity, E.P.Thompson and English radicalism achieves the almost impossible: it does justice to a great historical thinker and practitioner who also wrote poetry, loved liberty, hated humbug and resisted the inner and the outer hold of capital over human existence and experience. It illuminates a valiant, many-sided, quizzical friend of the people for readers who know his work and for those yet to discover his writing.'Sheila Rowbotham, author of 'Dreamers of a New Day: Women Who Invented the Twentieth Century' (2010) 'This eloquent set of essays manages to address, both sympathetically and critically, the many and varied aspects of Thompson’s life, as a historian, a teacher, a poet, a political activist, a Marxist and libertarian, and an Englishman and a cosmopolitan. Thompson’s legacy is hugely relevant for the troubled times in which we now live.'Mary Kaldor, The London School of Economics and Political Science|"A major book on Edward Thompson, who died 20 years ago, is an important reminder of the loss of English radicalism and the need to revive it"(Michael Barratt Brown, The Spokesman, 124, 2014), Michael Barratt Brown, The Spokesman, 2014|...this collection of essays explores in some detail the diverse range of activities and interests of this'passionate and romantic polymath., Martin Crick, The Journal of William Morris Studies, Vol. XXI, No. 1, Winter 2014, 86-90, 27 December 2014