Marion Turner is associate professor of English at Jesus College, University of Oxford.
A meticulously researched, well-styled academic study showing Chaucer as the `consummate networker.' * Kirkus * A hugely enjoyable, accessible, cradle-to-grave biography, bringing us from the baby Chaucer among merchants in Thames Street to the civil servant dying among monks at Westminster. In between we encounter the life, vividly detailed, not just of a brilliant artist, but of the streets and sea-lanes that shaped him. An admirably full life of England's first great Anglo-European poet. -David Wallace, University of Pennsylvania Marion Turner, in this splendid biography, shows us that Chaucer was, to be sure, powerfully inflected by the extraordinary range of places, both English and continental, through which he travelled and in which he lived. She also demonstrates, in lucid and lively prose, that Chaucer was what he read and imagined. Turner enlarges the genre, without for a moment losing her eagle-eyed command of the fascinating empirical detail. -James Simpson, Harvard University Marion Turner's ambitious biography is significantly different from others of Chaucer. Its focus on place enables Turner to explore Chaucer's national and international political and cultural background in more detail than ever before. -Helen Cooper, University of Cambridge This meaty new biography is likely to be the best book on the subject for decades to come. ---Steve Donoghue, Open Letters Review A European Life feels to me like a radical new take on a man we thought we knew, but whose sophisticated business, military and political career took him criss-crossing the continent. ---Andrew Marr, Start the Week, BBC Radio 4 Marion Turner has done a magnificent job. . . . I do not expect to see this biography superseded. ---Paul Dean, New Criterion A hugely illuminating book. This is one of those studies that academics like to call 'magisterial', but non-specialists will find much to enjoy here too. Turner's writing is never less than perspicacious, and often slyly humorous. . . . What A European Life does particularly well is to situate Chaucer in the largeness and complexity of his world. ---Tim Smith-Laing, The Telegraph (five star review) Turner charts an uncannily tangible route through Chaucer's life, binding his ideas and poems to precise locations, often enlivening it with consummate detail. . . . Chaucer: A European Life serves as a compass that allows readers to traverse Chaucer's London and Europe. At the same time, reading Turner's book makes us aware of how much our own lives are shaped by the rooms we inhabit and the places we visit. . . . Chaucer: A European Life introduces the 21st century to Chaucer and Chaucer to the 21st century ---Sebastian Sobecki, Literary Review In this fine biography, Marion Turner gives us new images of the poet. Turner's biography takes us from birth to death, but focuses on the spaces through which Chaucer moved, in reality and in poetic imagination. This is a clever move, and Turner's technique means that the poet's works can be woven organically into an account of his life. The book is elegantly written, accessible to the general reader as well as the scholarly specialist. In suggesting further questions and presenting an array of new images, Turner's book gives us back an image of Chaucer more melancholy and mercurial than the cosy figure we thought we knew. ---Mark Williams, The Times