"Murray's knowledge of Ackroyd and Sinclair is exhaustive, and he is spot-on in his analysis of the strategic ambiguities of both writers." Dr. Rod Mengham, Jesus College, University of Cambridge, UK.
- Dr Rod Mengham, University of Cambridge,
Murray has written an intelligent though difficult study, and all those with an interest in what is often now called 'public history' will benefit greatly from it.
- Literature and History, 18:1, 2009,
Murray's book provides a crucial counter to existing academic criticism of these writers by positioning the formal aspects of their work within its political frame. At a time when the disruptive potential of urban historiography is being subsumed by a wave of generic fiction developed around an East End mythology, he draws our attention to the perpetual necessity of fresh 're-callings' of London.
- Literary London, 6:1, 2008,