John Foot is the author of seven books, including The Archipelago: Italy since 1945; Calcio: A History of Italian Football; Pedalare, Pedalare. A History of Italian Cycling; Italy’s Divided Memory and The Man who Closed the Asylums. Five of his books have been translated into Italian. He has written for the Guardian, Independent on Sunday, London Review of Books and the TLS. He has appeared in a number of TV documentaries and on national and local radio. He is Professor of Modern Italian History at the University of Bristol and Director of an 8-university Doctoral Consortium funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Committee. He lives in Bristol with his partner and daughter. In the 1990s and 2000s, he lived in the city of Milan. He is a regular contributor to the Italian magazine Internazionale.
John Foot has written some fine books on Italy ... Blood and Power: the Rise and Fall of Italian Fascism is his finest to date ... He has given us a superb historical work, accessible and weighty, of how fascism once gripped a country, and has never fully let go. Blood and Power is essential reading of a political past that presages warning signs for all our political futures. -- N. J. McGarrigle * Irish Independent * A book swarming with people, each one of whose stories adds another touch to the big picture ... This is history as viewed, not by those who shaped it, but by those who endured it ... Clear, cool, plainly written and devastating. -- Lucy Hughes-Hallett * Times Literary Supplement * Foot has provided us with new villains and heroes ... [and] tells the interested reader stories that they will have probably never heard before -- David Aaronovitch * The Times, Book of the Week * This book is not a history of Italy, nor a Mussolini biography, but a study of his political movement - a fragmented word gallery of personalities and events -- Max Hastings * The Sunday Times * Meticulous ... Fascinating ... Where Foot's book is invaluable is in the light it sheds on dozens of unremembered heroes - who often, like [Giuseppe] Di Vagno, gave their lives attempting to save Italy from dictatorship - and in providing rounded pictures of men and women whose adventures we know about only partially. -- Caroline Moorhead * Literary Review * Excellent ... Highly readable ... A fascinating glimpse into the actual experience of living under fascist terror... The first book I have read which brings the reader to the heart of the period. -- William Wall * Dublin Review of Books * This is scholarly history at its best - vivid and clear. John Foot's narrative glitters from beginning to end. It offers both a highly readable account of Mussolini's ventennio and a rare depiction of how ordinary - and a few extraordinary - Italians experienced his thuggish dictatorship. Warmly recommended for anyone seeking to know what can happen when power falls into the hands of vainglorious nationalists. * John Hooper * Fascinating and illuminating throughout. John Foot has done the hard work of documenting in great detail the many lives and events that connected the Italy of the common people with the figure of Mussolini. Blood and Power offers disturbing intuitions as to the role of violence in the politics of the modern era. * Tim Parks * A gripping new history of fascism that privileges the voices of ordinary Italians and reminds us of the central role of violence in establishing and enforcing Mussolini's dictatorship. An excellent and timely work. * Ruth Ben-Ghiat, Professor of History and Italian Studies, New York University * One hundred years after the rise to power of Fascism in Italy, John Foot's bracing and bold Blood and Power vividly recreates the on-the-ground experience of life under the regime. * Robert S C Gordon, Serena Professor of Italian, University of Cambridge * Praise for The Archipelago: Italy since 1945: An enjoyable, highly readable history that manages to bring murky, often fiendishly complex events into the light * Sunday Times * It's an astonishing achievement, and structurally so innovative: a pointillistic portrait of a complicated country as the title suggests. It captures the sweep of post-war Italian history but is so precise and detailed as well. The assembling of great stories, anecdotes, quotations and characters makes reading it effortless but also immensely rewarding -- Tobias Jones [A] lively history ... Superbly researched * Observer * [A] breathless and entertaining (or despairing) voyage through postwar Italy ... A pleasure to read. It is not just about politics. It is also full of characters, vignettes and interesting facts * Literary Review * Admirable ... Foot's expertise in an illuminating range of subcultures is deep * Daily Telegraph * This deft history book guides readers through Italy's turbulent, complicated (and corrupt) postwar history * The Times *