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"highly readable... Oddie's biography is entertaining and scholarly, and the hero is very much Chesterton, pushing himself to the fore" - Brian Murdoch, Literature and Theology "This is a landmark study... Oddie's book marks a significant breakthrough in Chesterton scholarship... In the Epilogue, Oddie makes a powerful case for Chesterton's contemporary relevance as a prophet against the 'profound disenchantment' with humanity that underscores much twentieth-century literature and thought and the 'modernist' movements of Chesterton's time on which they leant. Historians should read the book for its depth of understanding of those movements, as well as the reaction they called forth in G.K. Chesterton." - Julia
Stapleton, Twentieth Century British History "The book has been thoroughly researched and makes good use of Chesterton's published writings... This study will not only advance our understanding of this important writerbut deepen our appreciation of the era in which Chesterton won his spurs. This book should take its place as one of the best insights into the intellectual ferment of modern England." - James Munson, Contemporary Review "There are a thousand fascinations in this book. Chesterton studies will now be dated as pre- and post-Oddie. Here for once is a book that merits the routine words of journalistic praise: it is 'magisterial' in its understanding, and, since its thoroughness of research is not likely to be rivalled in our lifetimes,
it is most certainly 'definitive'." - John Saward, The Catholic Herald "William Oddie's book is a painstaking and intelligent study" - Michael Wood, London Review of Books "William Oddie's Chesterton and the Romance of Orthodoxy gives a deeper understanding of its subject's thought, and the background to it, than any book since Chesterton's Autobiography in 1936...Dr Oddie brings out Chesterton's left-wing presuppositions and his astonishing gift for sharp insights" - Christopher Howse The Spectator "William Oddie's book, while intensely serious in its aim, and covering a wide variety of sacred topics, serves to remind us that Chesterton was incapable of writing a dull sentence, or composing a paragraph in
which the germ of laughter did not exist...Oddie's book... should give him a new lease of literary life." - Paul Johnson, Literary Review "Oddie has produced an abundance of new material to substantiate his picture" - A. N. Wilson, The Times Literary Supplement "This is the most convincing account of the development of Chesterton's mind yet published." - Christopher Howse, The Tablet "This seminal book should revolutionize Chesterton studies. Oddie has worked from barely explored sources and made important discoveries. This is the most original and serious work of research since Maisie Ward's pioneering biography of 1944." - Ian Ker, author of John Henry Newman: A Biography
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