Until now forgotten, neglected or maligned, Josiah Symon finally comes into focus in this absorbing account from one of the country's finest political historians and biographers. The result is some superb historical storytelling of a Scottish emigrant, South Australian success story and Federation founder for whom commitment to the law, politics and public affairs was enmeshed with deep devotion to family and literature. We also have here a fresh interpretation of the evolution of Australian settler democracy, seen through the prism of the life of an enterprising, intelligent, eloquent, generous, principled, proud and - at times - exasperating man. Frank Bongiorno, Professor of History, Australian National University Long-term leader of the Adelaide bar, highly influential state and Federal politician, ardent Federalist, bibliophile, philanthropist and vigneron, Josiah Symon spread his remarkable talents very widely. This Scottish-born titan of late colonial and early national Australian public life has long awaited a biographer capable of doing justice to the highs and lows of his remarkable achievements - and failures - legal, political, and domestic. Now Hancock's acute, balanced, and perceptive life history captures the person behind the public figure, besides making a significant contribution to our understanding of the various worlds in which Symon lived and moved. Professor Wilfrid Prest, University of Adelaide