William Morris: A Life for Our Time (2010) by Fiona MacCarthy

  1. The Idler
    The Idler
    Here's the blurb
    Since his death in 1896, William Morris has come to be regarded as one of the giants of the nineteenth century. But his genius was so many-sided and so profound that its full extent has rarely been grasped. Many people may find it hard to believe that the greatest English arts and crafts designer of his time, possibly of all time, could also be internationally renowned as a founder of the socialist movement, and could have been ranked as a poet together with Tennyson and Browning.
    With penetrating insight, Fiona MacCarthy has managed to encompass all the different facets of Morris's complex character, shedding light on his immense creative powers as artist and designer of arts and crafts furniture, fabrics, wallpaper, stained glass, tapestry and books, and as a poet, bestselling novelist (of News from Nowhere) and translator; his psychology and his emotional life; his frenetic activities as polemicist and reformer; and his remarkable circle of friends, literary, artistic and political.


    http://www.amazon.co.uk/William-Morr...dp/0571255590/