Review of the hardback: 'This is indispensable. It is, quite simply, the best book on Lawrence I have ever read, a really magnificent piece of work. Its theme is the interplay between Lawrence's ideas and his fictions ... nowhere has that dialectic been described more plausibly and more sensitively than in this marvellous book.' Ray Monk, Observer
Review of the hardback: 'The expanse of this particular study ... testifies to the almost Lawrentian care and richness with which Kinkead-Weekes has explored the novelist's private dramas.' Peter Ackroyd, The Times
Review of the hardback: 'This volume meets every requirement of an ideal biography. There is an immensely helpful chronology plus appendices ... there are the maps and photographs, the 200-plus pages of notes make a supplementary book of their own; the index is simply magnificent; and the text itself bundles its vast amount of material with meticulous patience, while the writing is marked by fairness and tolerance throughout.' Tony Tanner, The Times Literary Supplement
Review of the hardback: 'Mark Kinkead-Weekes combines alert and readable prose with a staggering depth of scholarship.' Boyd Tonkin, New Statesman and Society
Review of the hardback: 'This biography is a work of scrupulous attentiveness.' Guardian
Review of the hardback: 'Sensitive, illuminating, full of insight.' Financial Times
Review of the hardback: 'This is a superb biography, a work of impeccable scholarship that includes an impressive component of notes, appendices, chronological tables, and family trees, as well as complete lists of Lawrence's prose and verse writing in the relevant period. A wonderful achievement.' The Virginia Quarterly Review
Review of the hardback: 'The main strength of this biographer (Kinkead-Weekes) is his refusal to make facile judgements; instead he links Lawrence's personality disorders to his ability for dissecting human motivation.' The Irish Times
Review of the hardback: 'Without confusing life and art, Kinkead-Weekes makes a good job of tracing Lawrence's writing life. The effect is stunning in its thoroughness. It is a monumental contribution to Lawrence studies, and a riveting, good read besides.' The Scotsman
Review of the hardback: 'Mark Kinkead-Weekes has produced a wonderful second volume. His skill at sifting through anecdotage and speculation pays off in Triumph to Exile 1912-1922, the most convincing and objective account of Lawrence I have read.' The Sunday Times