Melanie Nolan is Professor of History, Director of the National Centre of Biography, and General Editor of the Australian Dictionary of Biography, in the School of History, at the Australian National University.
A hugely enjoyable read, deeply researched and knowledgeable, with an effective mix of structure, theory, and personality, as befits its subject. Very wide-ranging, it's peppered with names and connections. In squaring a number of circles, Biography: a Historiography is a single-handed refutation of any misgivings historians may have as to the biographer and their craft. Dr Martin Farr, Newcastle University, UK [I]t's a big, authoritative work with a dazzling range of research and reference, and passionate engagement with ideas and issues. A book to think with! Professor Richard Holmes, FRSL, FBA, OBE, Hon. Fellow of Churchill College Cambridge This is a most welcome addition to the literature on biography which will be attractive to readers in several different disciplines. Historians will like its very firm grounding in the development of historical writing since the nineteenth century; students of literature will learn much from its studies of the Bloomsbury biographers and life writing today; while social scientists will find much to explore and applaud in its confident discussion of concepts and methodology. The discussion of biography is integrated with the discussion of general historiography. Our pre-existing historiographical familiarity helps us to appreciate the novelty of the author's biographical arguments all the more. Professor Lawrence Goldman, Oxford University, UK There are numerous monographs on biography as a genre but no single text dealing with historians and biography, and yet historians are a major producer of biographies. Melanie Nolan's Biography: A Historiography provides the first systematic and focussed consideration of historians' biographical approaches and practices. It is a far ranging and much needed work, competently executed and underpinned by an impressive array of research. Professor Douglas Munro, University of Queensland, Australia