Dr Robert Morrison was educated at the universities of Oxford and Edinburgh. At present he is British Academy global professor at Bath Spa University. He is the author of The English Opium-Eater: A Biography of Thomas De Quincey, which was shortlisted for the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Biography.
Absorbing and powerful... From urban planning to landscape painting, the scope of The Regency Revolution is vast and illustrative of the unique contributions and lasting impact of this era. * Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine * An intriguing discussion on the finer and more fascinating aspects of the Regency period. * Library Journal * Morrison gathers a broad range of topics into a strong, cohesive, and fast-moving narrative. An excellent introduction for readers new to the period and a fresh take for Regency enthusiasts. * Booklist * Nobody knows more about this extraordinary, enthralling decade in British history than Robert Morrison... A triumph of historical storytelling. -- Deidre Lynch, author of Loving Literature: A Cultural History Lively... brings crisp focus to a significant decade in British history and culture... Morrison expertly encapsulates the brief, radical trends and movements of this era. * Kirkus Reviews * Delightful... Morrison's lively and engaging study not only illuminates [the Regency period's] many and rapid changes, but convincingly argues that its many legacies are still all around us . * Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) * The Prince Regent... ruled over a period of extraordinary creativity and it is that progressive cultural legacy that Mr. Morrison commends to contemporary Britain and the rest of the world. * Wall Street Journal * A huge canvas is covered with great brio. There's no doubt that the Regency was a lively time, and in many ways Morrison catches it with spirited energy and pithy narrative. * Times Higher Education Supplement * Morrison showcases that relatively brief period - less than a decade - as an age of remarkable diversity, upheaval, and elegance. ... Given such plenty, what more could one ask from a work of cultural history? * Washington Post * A zippy and vivid portrait... [Morrison] portrays big characters and changes, charting the emergence of a Britain that was more desiring, democratic, secular, opportunistic . At the same time he is fascinated by its uglier features: the bare-knuckle prizefights, the squalid rookeries where beggars and criminals consorted. * The Times * A spirited and wide-ranging account of life in - and out of - Regency England... [Morrison] does a splendid job of exposing the grubby underbelly of Georgian life... Elegant, entertaining and frequently surprising. * New York Times * Superb... The Regency period lasted for less than a decade but, as Mr Morrison argues, its many legacies are still all around us. It was also, as this book amply proves, marvellously entertaining. * The Economist *