William Morris, the best known British socialist of the nineteenth century, is also the most widely appealing. Marxist revolutionaries, Fabians, anarchists, Labour Party stalwarts—all have claimed him as one of their own. Florence Boos’s collection of Morris’s political essays confirms that Morris contained multitudes. Yet powerful, unchanging beliefs link the Gladstonian liberal of the 1870s with the visionary author of News from Nowhere. Boos’s deeply informed introductions to every essay draw out their underlying themes and illuminate Morris’s enduring relevance.