This is a meticulously researched and very readable study of the Capuchin friars. Temple explores the lived experience of the Franciscan calling to priesthood and brotherhood through changing circumstances and in locations as different as Peckham south London, the industrialising villages of north Wales and the hop fields of Kent, carefully contextualising each place and era in broader Catholic and British history. The study makes a particular contribution to the history of Catholicism in Wales but more broadly illuminates how people and places at the social and geographical ‘peripheries’ of Britain were connected into the global Church through this transnational religious order. Written with full access to Capuchin archives, Radical Poverty is a pioneering study in the largely unexplored history of male religious institutes in Britain from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day.