With its numerous reproductions, including many in color, this contribution to the "Renaissance Lives" series fully accomplishes its goal of providing an attractive and authoritative introduction to understanding Niccolņ Machiavelli . . . While intended as an introduction, Black's study succeeds in bringing into focus many of the most controversial issues surrounding Machiavelli. * Choice * As Robert Black's final chapter in his concise but impressively comprehensive biography demonstrates, Machiavelli has lent his name to any if not every underhand, deceptive or even malignant political practice in world affairs . . . Black is the ideal author to produce this beautifully presented addition to the publisher's Renaissance Lives series . . . a serious analysis of an intriguing figure whom he claims to have been, "in his intellectual prime, a dissident for all times." * Morning Star * This work by an outstanding expert on Machiavelli should help to snatch the celebrated Florentine away from political scientists. Robert Black touches on Machiavellis entire oeuvre, including his sparkling series of political letters and memoranda. We soon see that Machiavellis literary legacy is a teeming store of insight that also casts light on The Prince, as well as on his reflections concerning republics. The redoubtable Florentine comes through richly in this splendid book. * Lauro Martines, formerly UCLA, leading historian of Renaissance Florence * Robert Blacks new Machiavelli is the best short life now available in English. It is the only one fully up to date with the latest scholarship, and the only one with a detailed grasp of Machiavelli's political context in Florence. It is also the first biography to make a strong case that Machiavelli evolved into a political conservative after the publication of his Discourses and The Art of War. Indispensable! * James Hankins, Professor of History, Harvard University * Robert Blacks Machiavelli: From Radical to Reactionary provides an excellent and finely illustrated introduction to the author and his critical reception. Drawing on an expert knowledge of politics and humanism in Renaissance Florence, it reassesses all Machiavellis works lucidly and incisively in the context of his career and his relationships with the Medici family. It stands out for its emphasis on Machiavellis adaptability as a thinker and writer who at different moments was a cynical advocate of tyranny and of disregard for the common good of citizens, a champion of ancient Roman republicanism, and finally a constitutional and literary conservative who accepted compromise and conventional values. * Brian Richardson, Emeritus Professor of Italian Language, University of Leeds *