Richard Lansdown took his bachelor's and doctoral degrees at University College, London. After two years teaching literature in Finland he moved to Australia, where he has taught in New South Wales and Tropical North Queensland, where he still lives and works. He has written two other studies of Lord Byron, and numerous articles on Romantic and Nineteenth-Century literature.
It is time to talk about Lord Byron again. It is also time to read him again, and I recommend Lansdowns Selected Letters and Journals as an excellent place to start. Amit Majmuder, Able Muse Richard Landsdown's book is a selection from Marchand's 12, with copious biographical notes. It is hard to reduce twelve to one, but Lansdown has done well, giving readers a lively sense of this singularly magnetic individual . Denis Donoghue, Irish Times Lansdown does a valiant job of representing the thought processes and publishing dilemmas behind the major works Corin Throsby, Times Literary Supplement ... it is well-judged, gives good coverage to different periods of Byron's life, and feels substantially representative ... Keats-Shelley Review informed, sympathetic and well-researched... deeply interesting and well-chosen selection Tablet, Robert Carver This new selection of Byron's proseis arranged chronologically and linked by so much informed, sympathetic and well-researched explanatory material that it amounts to a sort of biography. The Tablet This is a deeply interesting and well-chosen selection, unusually clearly printed on the highest-quality pure, white, thick paper, with superb binding: it resembles more a quality production from a private press than a trade publication, and it will certainly last several lifetimes. The Tablet splendid volume Open Letters Monthly The 500-odd footnoted pages Lansdown has selected are aimed not at scholars and students but at intelligent readers of literary prose. Independent This is Byron in the raw and can only add to his legend Northern Echo when you line Bryon's letters up like this, one after the other, you can't help but notice the growth of something like art...his prose is extraordinary Sunday Telegraph, Benjamin Markovitz