Reviews:
-The opening pages offer a concise, well-presented summary of the period 1400-1620...a prelude to the rest of the book. If a faculty member needed to introduce the period quickly, these pages would do that job well.
—Sixteenth Century Journal
-Americans like the Renaissance. So concludes distinguished Renaissance scholar Paul F. Grendler in this book every sholar should read. The European Renaissance in American Life is a work that in less sympathetic hands might have devolved into yet another satire of American middle-class, middle-brow, and middle-mind culture. In Grendler's hands, however, America's love affair with the Renaissance comes off as something more than whimsy, kitsch, or simple goofiness....[a]nd emerges as a challenge to those of us who toil daily at revealing, critiquing, deconstructing, or simply understanding the Renaissance....As far as it goes, Grendler's is a terrific book and a wonderful read.
—Renaissance Quarterly
-For anyone wanting to be more observant and knowledgeable of the European Renaissance period's influence on today's society, this text is a wonderful read.
—Smoke and Fire News
-Paul Grendler's book examines how and why the famous figures and icons of Renaissance Italy and Renaissance England resonate so well outside the scholarly community. He works hard to point out ways in which these modern interpreters beyond the ivory tower have used, or misused, the principal ideas and achievements of this era....The book should be useful to lower-level undergraduates and to adult students, and it will be amusing and thought-provoking to faculty and graduate students.
—H-Italy