"Kakangulu's story…has been strikingly told before. But on nothing like this scale. Dr. Twaddle's book has been thirty years in the making, and is as ample an account as is likely to be produced. Indeed as a biography of a nineteenth century African it is all but without peer." (African Affairs) "Twaddle has chosen a very difficult genre…But he handles it with great skill, and has put the historiography of late nineteenth and early twentieth-century Uganda on to a quite new footing, commenting incisively and acutely on the nature of Ganda society in the days of his hero's youth, the tangled power-struggle of 1888-93 and the aims and methods of proto-colonial government." (Journal of African History) "Michael Twaddle's unraveling of what was a thoroughly complicated story is a considerable feat of research, particularly as he has written it in such a way that the reader is not drowned in the complications." (Kunerario)