This is an excellent popular biography of William Wordsworth. I recommend it to fans of the poet and anyone planning a trip to Britain's Lake District, where Wordsworth grew up and later lived. The region inspired his most famous poems and contains houses and museums tourists can visit. The author of this biography lightens the subject matter with personal touches and humour and brings in other authors of the era, such as Coleridge and Sr. Walter Scott, who were friends of Wordsworth. The book is also a portrait of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Wordsworth went to France during the French Revolution, during his young radical phase. He walked from France to Switzerland, since there were no trains, buses and automobiles. Well into his sixties he routinely walked 20 miles or more a day, often just to get from one place to another. I was also intrigued to learn that the critics savaged his published poetry until he was late in life. The author describes his relationships with various women, most notably his sister Dorothy. More than inspiring his poems her journals provided the germs of the actual wordings. Interesting, too, that now over 150 years after his death there might still be mysteries to discover. Researchers only learned of his illegitimate daughter in 1920 and a branch of the Wordsworth family continues in France.