Author:Daniel Defoe,Richard Hamblyn
On the evening of 26th November 1703, a cyclone from the north Atlantic hammered into southern Britain at over seventy miles an hour, claiming the lives of over 8,000 people. Eyewitnesses reported seeing cows left stranded in the branches of trees and windmills ablaze from the friction of their whirling sails. For Defoe, bankrupt and just released from prison for seditious writings, the storm struck during one of his bleakest moments.
But it also furnished him with the material for his first book, and in his powerful depiction of private suffering and individual survival played out against a backdrop of public calamity we can trace the outlines of his later masterpieces such as A Journal of the Plague Year and Robinson Crusoe.
Roe is an exceptionally shrewd critic of Romanticism - uncannily alert... everything he says is well-turned and reliably clever
—— Andrew Motion , GuardianRoe provides as complete a portrait as we are likely to get of Hunt’s first 37 years
—— Nicholas Shakespeare , Daily TelegraphRoe offers a meticulous and thorough account of Hunt’s significance in the literary culture of the Regency era
—— Sunday TelegraphRoe is a seasoned Romantic scholar who offers an impassioned account of Hunt's 'first life'
—— D J Taylor , Sunday TimesRoe's biography is an absorbing account of English intellectual culture in the early 19th century
—— Evening StandardExcellent...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