

Wilberforce’s best seller is a long book with a long title. In editing the issue, we found Sir Reginald Coupland’s Wilberforce (Collins, 1945) a nice balance of engaging prose and good scholarship. Immediately after his death, two of his sons, Robert Isaac and Samuel, penned The Life of William Wilberforce (1839), which is the source of a great deal of material found in later biographies.įor modern treatments, see John Pollock’s Wilberforce (Lion, 1977) for a full account, or Garth Lean’s God’s Politician (Helmers & Howard, 1987) for a quick read. You’d expect a man as great as William Wilberforce to generate some fine biographies, and he has. Here’s what we've come up with on Wilberforce and British social reform.

Beginning with this issue, we’re going to make an even greater effort to make readers aware of the best books, movies, recordings, CDs, and Web sites related to the topic. When it comes to learning about the past, books are still the main course, but increasingly there are a variety of dishes upon which history is served. HISTORY, like everything else, has become multimedia.
