Richard Reeves, author the acclaimed biography John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand, will lecture at the University of Richmond in Richmond, Va. on Wednesday, September 16, 7pm. Now available in paperback, Reeves's beautifully written book is the definitive life of one of the heroic giants of Victorian England. A young activist and highly-educated Cambridge Union debater, Mill would become in time the highest-ranked English thinker of the nineteenth century, the author of the landmark essay "On Liberty" and one of the most passionate reformers and advocates of his revolutionary, opinionated age. As a journalist he fired off a weekly article on Irish land reform as the people of that nation starved, as an MP he introduced the first vote on women's suffrage, fought to preserve free-speech and opposed slavery, and, in his private life, pursued for two decades a love affair with another man's wife. Exploring Mill's life and work in tandem, Reeves's book is a riveting and authoritative biography of a man raised to promote happiness, whose life was spent in the pursuit of truth and liberty for all.
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Blog: The Winged Elephant (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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In today's issue of the New York Post, Adam Kirsch reviews John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand, by Richard Reeves:
"If history, as Edward Gibbon said, is 'little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind,' it makes sense that the greatest criminals tend to receive the most attention from historians. Napoleon, a tyrant who was responsible for millions of deaths, is the most biographized figure in modern history, and it seems that new biographies of Stalin and Hitler crowd the bookstores every year. It is pleasant to be reminded, then, that good men can also make history from time to time — that humanity is not too fascinated by its destroyers to pay tribute to its benefactors.
"'John Stuart Mill: Victorian Firebrand' (Overlook, 616 pages, $40), an accessible and admiring new biography by Richard Reeves, is such a tribute. Mr. Reeves — a British journalist, not the American biographer of presidents Kennedy, Nixon, and Reagan — works hard in this book to humanize Mill, to rescue him from his deadening fame as 'a bone-dry, formal, humourless Victorian.'"
Kirsch concludes his extensive review by boiling down Mill's complex political views into this insightful gem:
"Mill's specific political views do not map neatly onto today's categories of left and right... What united all these opinions, as Mr. Reeves skillfully shows, was a constant dedication to liberty as he understood it: 'the consciousness of working out [our] own destiny under [our] own moral responsibility.'"

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