As a historian, I struggle to find anything to dislike about E. P. Thompson, even if I do not share his historical materialist perspective. He was a famously sympathetic interpreter of his historical subjects, and his writing is peppered with wit and insight. His theoretical essays are mainly critiques of Althusser and went over my head for the most part, but I remain impressed by his example of what a historian can be, especially as demonstrated in the excerpts from The Making of the English Working Class and William Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary, which make up slightly over half of this volume.