The Fall is a deeply studied book about a uniquely thorny period of English history, and makes a successful case for its enduring importance.Daniel Brooks, The Telegraph
This is a fresh academic look at a crucial 22 months of great interest in the history of Parliament, between the death of Cromwell and the return of the monarchy.Lord Moylan, Publishers Association, Winter Reading List for Parliamentarians, 2024
[ A] brilliant new history.Andrea Valentino, The Critic
[ A] compelling and lively study. . . . [ Reeces] work will certainly encourage historians to think again about a period too often treated as no more than a prologue to the inevitable restoration of royal government.Edward Vallance, Literary Review
The Fall has drawn the reader in enough to float over the surface, to understand the lay of the land and to navigate the impenetrable and, most importantly, to have fun while doing so.Debbie Kilroy, GetHistory
This is the best narrative history to date of a crucial and yet neglected part of British history. It is exciting, pugnacious, original, informative, generally convincing, and a great read.Ronald Hutton, author of The Making of Oliver Cromwell
An important study of a seriously misunderstood period. Through his deeply researched high-political narrative, Reece shows that there was greater support for kingless government in England than hitherto recognized and that the republic could have survived for years following the fall of the Protectorate; the restoration of the monarchy did not become inevitable until very late in the day.Tim Harris, author of Rebellion: Britains First Stuart Kings, 15671642
A gripping account of one of Britains pivotal moments: the fall of the Protectorate and Commonwealth. Superbly written and deeply researched, Reece deftly unravels an enormously complex political story and, in the process, shows that the Restoration of the monarchy was by no means a foregone conclusion. An outstanding contribution to the history of early modern Britain.Victor Stater, author of Hoax
Both fresh and refreshing. A vigorous and thought-provoking case is made for seeing the regimes of 165859 as having the potential for longer-term survival and durability. This elegant, judicious and balanced narrative will rightly supersede most previous studies of the late 1650s.Peter Gaunt, author of The English Civil War: A Military History