"A fascinating and fitting monument to one of the Renaissances most formidable literary minds."---Alexander Lee, Literary Review "[ A] scholarly study. . . . McLaughlin knows his subject inside and out." * Publishers Weekly * "A comprehensive view of the humanists literary output."---Suzanna Murawski, New Criterion "A genuinely awe-inspiring piece of scholarship and research."---Terry Potter, The Letterpress Project "[ A] learned, lucid book. . . . McLaughlin has set out to show what sort of writer Alberti was, and the results are impressive."---Anthony Grafton, London Review of Books "Martin McLaughlins. . . . scholarly yet lucid writing makes plain just how original and individual a figure [ Alberti] was, and how so much of his work deserves to be rescued from obscurity. In many ways he comes closer than most scholars to Alberti, who, one feels, would have gratefully recognized in him a fellow spirit."---Peter Hainsworth, Times Literary Supplement "Thorough and clearly authoritative, [ this book] traverses all that is already known about [ Albertis] literary works, but perhaps more importantly, it also addresses the writers wide knowledge of classical texts, as well as his later philosophical dialogue." * David Marx Book Reviews *