Author:Robin Blake
Far more than a fine horse portraitist, George Stubbs was a painter and a printmaker of the highest importance, on a par with his great contemporaries, Hogarth, Reynolds and Gainsborough. An artist-scientist who emulated Leonardo da Vinci, Stubbs tirelessly explored the natural world, and new ways of representing it.
Born the son of a Liverpool tradesman, Stubbs was self-taught and at first struggled in obscurity as a northern provincial painter. Robin Blake's book uncovers Stubbs's origins and some of the secrets of his youth: sympathy with the Jacobite rebels and Catholicism; and a previously undocumented wife and family in York.
A 'niece', Mary, became his mistress and lifelong companion, working alongside him as he dissected the carcasses of horses. In 1776 he published these investigations as The Anatomy of the Horse, which was his breakthrough, leading to commissions from the most powerful men in Georgian Britain. By tracing the network of patronage and friendship through which George Stubbs operated, Robin Blake reveals the remarkable succession of animals, people and ideas which inspired him.
Stubbs emerges as a man of huge energy and complex sensibility whose artistry was informed by science, politics, literature, classical art and - above all - nature itself.
Startlingly original... This is history at its most synoptic, weaving together disparate themes in a counterpoint of science and aesthetics, race and reclamation, hydrology and mythology
—— Daniel Johnson , Sunday TimesThis book offers a fresh insight into this passage of German history and will interest engineers, ecologists, economists, politicians and historians alike
—— BookendsSublimely good... Blackbourn has found an original and suggestive way into the history of both Germany's aggrandisement and its humility... far more than a good book on an out-of-the-way subject
—— The EconomistDavid Blackbourn has written an entertainingly original history, rich in insights into man and nature and the German - in fact, the European - mind
—— Mark Kurlansky, bestselling author of CodBrilliantly conceived, David Blackbourn's thought-provoking exploration of the ambivalence built into past attempts to exploit the environment offers a wholly novel approach to understanding modern German history. His book is a tour de force in historical writing
—— Ian KershawA wide-ranging and highly original study... Blackbourn weaves elegantly among the disciplines, integrating the histories of science, technology, politics, diplomacy, culture and ecology into a nuanced and many-layered analysis of change
—— Christopher Clark , Times Literary SupplementA significant contribution to new ways of writing about the past… magnificently compelling
—— Neal Ascherson , London Review of BooksOne of the finest works of historical reconstruction I have ever encountered.
—— Jonathan Wright , Catholic HeraldHer enthusiasm is exhilarating and contagious; her writing is clear and clean, sharply observant of tactile details and what they reveal about 16th-century life
—— Boston GlobeEngagingly written and awash in the practicalities of life in the age, it presents a vivid, fascinating era of British history and reminds us that we're never as far from the past as we like to think
—— Genevieve Valentine , NPRImmersive, engrossing
—— Laura Miller , SlateWritten with such passion . . . will fascinate and inform anyone who is interested in Victorian ways of life
—— Dr Ian Mortimer, author of 'The Time Traveller’s Guide to Medieval England' on 'How to Be a Victorian'If we ever have a female Doctor Who, I shall forward Ruth Goodman's name for consideration, not least because the historian has already done so much time travelling
—— The TimesWonderful, informative, startling . . . Goodman's unique selling proposition as a historian is that she walks the walk of her time period, even when that walk involves hard labor in a corset and a hoop skirt
—— New York Times (on 'How to be a Victorian')Must-read!
—— Daily MailGoodman's passion for her subject... comes across loud and clear
—— Yorkshire Post[A] rewarding biography… Roper brings him alive as a very human figure.
—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times, Book of the YearThis is the book about Luther we’ve missed among all the holy books and the case studies: the whole engrossing story of a soul and a mind and the man who broke the old world and its old ways for ever. Lyndal Roper brings alive the struggle for ideas, adds a subtle sense of how human beings work, and distils a lifetime of scholarship to conjure Luther’s own world with its princes, demons, scandals and sheer brave defiance of a whole old order
—— Michael Pye, author of The Edge of the WorldCompelling and above all deeply honest biography.
—— David Crane , SpectatorThis book will continue to bring the reformer and his theology to life for generations to come.
—— Bridget Heal , History Today, Book of the Year[An] excellent study.
—— Jonathan Wright , BBC History Magazine*****
—— Christopher Howse , Sunday TelegraphRoper’s Luther is an angry man: a renegade and a rebel… [She] paints a vivid picture of the political and economic context in Mansfeld, where Luther grew up, and of the situation of Wittenberg and its political governance. There are important findings here, particularly relating to Luther’s early life
—— Charlotte Methuen , The Times Literary SupplementRoper writes with the virtuosity of an unsurpassed archival researcher, the grace of an elegant stylist, and the compassion of a seasoned student of human nature. Her nuanced and insightful portrait brilliantly evokes the inner and outer worlds of the man Luther. The book is a complete triumph.
—— Joel F. Harrington, author of The Faithful ExecutionerMagnificent and surely definitive – a work of immense scholarship, acute psychological insight and gloriously fluent prose. Lyndal Roper has got under the skin of her subject and the result is thrilling.
—— Jessie Childs, author of Henry VIII’s Last Victim and God’s TraitorsRoper’s scholarly strengths plus 10 years of careful research have yielded a richly contextualised biography of a man whose influence has been and remains enormous, for good or ill or both.
—— Brad Gregory , TabletThis is a helpful and insightful examination of Luther’s attitudes and relationships… Highly recommended.
—— Martin Wellings , Methodist RecorderRoper portrays a deeply flawed but fascinating human being to rival any of the major personalities of Tudor England.
—— Caroline Sanderson , BooksellerI heartily commend Martin Luther… It is simply the best English-language biography of Luther I’ve read and I’d be amazed if its combination of rigorous scholarship and approachable tone is bettered.
—— Francis Philips , Catholic Herald, Book of the Year[A] superb new biography… A challenging and deeply stimulating study of a major historical figure.
—— Elaine Fulton , History TodayThe work of a brilliant scholar, who had devoted years of research to the project, and it repays careful reading… There are rich treasures in the book, without a bout. Roper has a great gift for narrative… Roper’s exploration of the cultural and social world of the Saxon miners is masterly… Fascinating.
—— Euan Cameron , Church TimesA probing psychological account.
—— Very Rev. Professor Iain Torrence , Herald Scotland