"Undoubtedly a book of enduring importance, which has, somewhat paradoxically, finally lain to rest the notion that the struggle for free trade was in any way soporific."--Paul Pickering, Journal of British Studies
"[A] fascinating book, wide ranging, detailed, well organized, and written in an engaging style."--American Historical Review
"In Free Trade Nation Frank Trentmann brilliantly reconstructs the story of the Edwardian peak of popular enthusiasm for Free Trade in Britain...and the rapid dissolution of the secular religion of Free Trade in the post-1914 world.... the real innovative weight of this volume lies in providing the most thorough and lucid exploration we have of the erosion of the free trade consensus after 1914.... the novelty of this account lies in its pioneering attempt to turn the attention of political historians away from elections and parties towards an understanding of consumption and citizenship as central to the nature of political culture in twentieth-century Britain.... carefully constructed, engagingly written, finely illustrated, and suitably well-marketed."--Anthony Howe, H-Albion
"Free Trade Nation is an important contribution to the cultural and social history of economic debates."--Revue d'histoire du XIX Siécle
"Free Trade Nation is a book of seminal importance. It is also a cracking good read."--Free Trade League Newsletter
"Exhaustively explores Britains Free Trade culture from the nineteenth century to World War I."--Harvard Magazine
"[A] brilliant book...rich and multi-faceted...full of unexpected insights....Not only a product of wonderful scholarship but also great fun... It is essential reading for anyone interested in the development of modern Britain."--English Historical Review
"[T]his impressive study...shows how liberalism turned into social democracy and how the arguments for and against Free Trade both shaped national life and embodied current views regarding man, government and society. After this book, no study of Victorian liberalism can be conducted in quite the same way."--Contemporary Review
"Trentmann...demonstrates the extent to which we can misunderstand early twentieth-century British politics by concentrating on producer interests. His reconstruction of consumer politics is both persuasive and authoritative. His work also has significance for longer-run, revisionist histories of British working-class politics."--History: Reviews of New Books
"An inspired history....Trentmann's book unfolds a dramatic story...[G]ripping..."--Neue Zuercher Zeitung
"Thoughtful and well-researched."--Christopher Harvie, The Independent
"A lucid history of free trade in Britain."--David Connett, Sunday Express
"This is terrific history that will inspire economists to remember their subject really can arouse passion."--Evan Davis, BBC Economics Editor
"Free Trade Nation is history at its best: far-reaching and authoritative, its story of the rise and fall of free trade as a widely-held belief marked by justice, fairness, and peace provocatively refashions the history of early-twentieth-century Britain, reminds us of an age when popular politics exerted real power, and forces us to rethink our contemporary views of consumers, markets and morality."--John Brewer, California Institute of Technology
"Here we have 'a human history of Free Trade' that is at once a delight to read and a cause of profound intellectual stimulation. It graphically brings alive--with splendid colour reproductions of propaganda posters too--the popular passions and prejudices of a world that suddenly ended during the First World War....This is a book imbued with fine scholarship...that deserves a wide readership."--Peter Clarke, Times Literary Supplement
"[B]rilliant..."--Sunday Telegraph
"[F]ascinating..."--Il Riformista
"[A]bsorbing..."--History Today
"[P]aints a vivid picture of the ideological controversy over Free Trade that remains relevant to this day."--Luxemburger Wort
"Offers a fresh look at a chapter in British and world history, while at the same time providing a historical perspective on today's debate about globalisation, challenging the ways we have come to think about trade, justice and democracy."--Society Now
"[A] landmark in economic history and the history of ideas."--La Vie des Idées
"Frank Trentmann...has not only added a great deal to our knowledge through painstaking research but has written about it with verve and energy and produced a most readable volume."--Reviews in Economic and Business History
"Frank Trentmann's book will be the point of departure for any future scholarship on free trade....It is a ground-breaking study."--European Review of History
"This is a superb book."--History
"In writing Free Trade Nation, Trentmann set out to tell the personal histories of free trade and also to write a new political history. He succeeds admirably on both accounts. Free Trade Nation should be read by anyone interested in the history of modern Britain."--British Scholar, "Book of the Month" (December 2008)
"[A] major scholarly work [that] forces the reader to grapple with basic questions relating economics to politics, consumption to democracy, and offers the tools for doing so in a comparative, global frame....[D]eserves to be read as much by citizens...as by scholars....Trentmann offers an important contribution, both to the history of Great Britain and to political history more generally."--Journal of Consumer Policy
"Free Trade Nation is an immensely ambitious book, both in the density and complexity of its argument, and in the historical ideas and materials mobilised in support of its central theme....[A]n important and exciting book, whose arguments will need to be seriously addressed and assessed by students of both economic and political history."--Economic History
"I recommend this book to anyone interested in a better understanding of the cultural aspects of national economics. The work is well done, entertaining, and fairly presented."--World History Bulletin