"A History Today Book of the Year"
"[An] excellent new study."<b>---Andrew Hadfield, <i>Times Literary Supplement</i></b>
"A fascinating window onto Tudor life at its best, worst and most complicated."<b>---Noel Malcolm, <i>Daily Telegraph</i></b>
"Thoroughly enjoyable and enlightening."<b>---Dominic Green, <i>Wall Street Journal</i></b>
"Andersson profiles in this diligent study 16th-century court jester William Somer, Henry VIII’s favored ‘fool.’ . . . The result is an illuminating look into Somer’s role as a source of broad humor and stress relief in a tumultuous court ruled by a mercurial king."
Publishers Weekly
"Andersson has given us a vivid, tantalising portrait of [Will Somer] and a nuanced exploration of how he and those around him negotiated one another. . . .Will Somer’s ghost has life in it yet."<b>---Matthew Lyons, <i>History Today</i></b>
"Anyone who wants to know about this oddly central figure in Tudor life will find Andersson’s book worthwhile."<b>---Alec Ryrie, <i>The Conversation</i></b>
"A fascinating look at Will Somer, Henry VIII’s court fool. . . .A book that makes a great case for looking at history through those who are often disregarded."<b>---Nandini Das, <i>History Today</i></b>
"Even by the end of this biography, you will wonder how much you know about Will Somer, and that is all to the good. . . . [Andersson] provides a therapeutic rebuke to much of the nonsense written about Somer."<b>---Carl Rollyson, <i>New York Sun</i></b>
"A short and delightful account of William Somer, fool to Henry VIII and one of the best-known individuals in Tudor England. . . . Andersson accepts that his book is ‘not a conventional biography.' But he revels in the opportunities that this admission permits. . . . [<i>Fool</i>] offers the prehistory of comedy as the history of disability. Andersson packs a lot of thinking in a short but compelling read. Here’s one fool that we really must take seriously."<b>---Crawford Gibbon, <i>New Criterion</i></b>