Marion Turner

[10] Kirkus Reviews describes Chaucer: A European Life, as "A meticulously researched, well-styled academic study" and writes, "Though perhaps too dense for general readers, the book is well-suited to scholars and students of medieval literature.

"[11] Philip Knox writes for The Review of English Studies, "Her expansive book is written with an unusual mix of erudition, clarity, and wit: it will be required reading for specialists, an invaluable resource for students, and a rich introduction to Chaucer's world for the general reader.

"[12] Alastair Minnis writes for The Spenser Review, "Turner's style is her own – lively, vivid, witty and often chatty, dispensing many delightful confections of information by way of contextualising the few hard facts that are known about the poet's life.

"[13] Tim Smith-Laing describes Turner for The Telegraph as "Stating her belief that Chaucer's "emotional life [...] is beyond the biographer's reach", she disclaims any attempt to reconstruct the person, and opts, via daunting amounts of original research and scholarly legwork, for the more complex and satisfying task of interrogating how it is that personhood emerges from its place in the world.

"[18] A review by Mary Wellesley in The Telegraph gives the book 5 out of 5 stars and states, "Turner's wonderful new "biography" of Alison shows how radical she was in her time, and explains why she has proved so popular across the ages and in novel cultural contexts.