Author:Thomas Macaulay,Hugh Trevor-Roper
One of the greatest figures of his age, Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-59) was widely admired throughout his life for his prose, poetry, political acumen and oratorical skills. Among the most successful and enthralling histories ever written, his History of England won instantaneous success following the publication of its first volumes in 1849, and was rapidly translated into most European languages. Beginning with the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and concluding at the end of the reign of William III in 1702, it illuminates a time of deep struggle throughout Britain and Ireland in vivid and compelling prose. But while Macaulay offers a gripping narrative, and draws on a wide range of sources including historical accounts and creative literature, his enduring success also owes a great deal to his astonishing ability to grasp, and explain, the political reality that has always underpinned social change.
For anybody interested in the spider's web of war-time deception, in which Popov lighted like an iridescent butterfly, this Tricycle is worth a ride
—— Christopher Hudson , Daily MailAs intriguing and nerve-wracking as [the] subject's career
—— Jeremy Lewis , Sunday TimesGripping... With Perkin, Wroe has breathed new life into an obscure figure
—— Daily MailA book that captures the temper of an age
—— Financial TimesRewards every moment of attention
—— Sunday TelegraphExcellent...intriguing reading...Surely [Leigh Hunt] should be back in print for us to judge him now
—— Daily MailRoe brings to his work decades of research on the period...[his] volume is free of imprecision and well-informed
—— Independent