Bartholomew's book is published by Morton's former publisher Methuen, who really should have sent him back to consider (not reconsider). There is little insight here, nothing significant about Morton's real influences or his wives and families. One gets the feeling that, gifted the trove of Mortoniana, in particular many diaries, letters and drafts of Morton's Memoir, that Bartholomew baulked at the extra legwork. Worse, because we cannot read the Memoir ourselves, we cannot judge the truth of Bartholomew's conclusions, which become more unconvincing the further along we read.
Still worse, Bartholomew, writing as the pc-mafia just as the English Blair government was getting into its stride, rather pompously judges Morton by 1990s standards, rather than considering the values, interests and circumstances surrounding Morton's own life. This flaw rather devalues the man's credibility as 'an academic historian', unless we take the term (Bartholomew's own) to mean 'a grown man who jams objects into wrongly shaped holes, thus deceiving the public, and is paid handsomely for his pains'. The little we see of Morton's unpublished Memoir clearly reveals plenty of cues for Bartholomew to extract the real story, yet he never really approaches it, spending most of the 250 pages critiquing Morton's books and his (apparent) politics, which is not what we came for. For example, the real origins of Morton's sexuality, and what kept him returning to it, is not readily or, I feel, honestly examined. Certainly it must be there, it's a significant part of the man, but we only see Morton in his time when Morton himself is quoted.
Personally, I would prefer Methuen to first, republish I, James Blunt, Cycling in Wartime, and What I Saw In the Slums in a single volume (there's certainly sufficient demand), and publish Morton's memoirs interspersed with significant diary extracts (and get someone more suitable to edit them). This would be far more honest than the finger-wagging Bartholomew. One can only hope that a dedicated Morton fan will emerge from his old two seater, gather his cape, pull out his silver-tipped cane and have another, more inquisitive and open-minded go. One also hopes that, upon being introduced to Bartholomew, Morton fans do not lose their composure and knee the 'academic historian' in the nuts.
This is the first bad review I've put up on Goodreads, and I'm writing this because I'm angry. I wanted to know more about the man, and I feel Bartholomew failed badly. The two stars I rate this are mostly for the (published and unpublished) quotes from Morton Bartholomew uses.