It is probably quite difficult to write a book about Michael Faraday that is NOT interesting, but this comes close. In comparing this book to the many other books that have been or will be written about Michael Faraday, this book would do well if it were noticed as an amusing curiosity - a book about a scientist written by an art historian. But unfortunately even that is probably hoping for more recognition than is likely to be given to it. Faraday was a scientist and his life is of interest largely to people who approach matters in a scientific way - something that book fails to do with its own subject. True to its title, but true also to its flaw, this book dwells too much on "The Life". On the whole there is an imbalance with too detailed (and perhaps too well researched) a picture of the man, but with little depth (and perhaps too little research) about the great scientific advances he made. It is also disappointing that the author makes no effort to conceal his own leaning towards art rather than science - losing no opportunity to comment in tedious detail on every single one of Faraday's "artistic" acquantainces and experiences (and there are surprisingly many) but ultimately failing to make any meaningful connection between the man's interest in art and the many reasons why he is remembered. Clearly art played a significant part in the man's life, but at the end of this book we have no firm idea of how or why or to what extent it shaped him.
Ultimately, this is a forgettable, plodding biography with only the occassional original insight. It will be of passing, but not lasting, interest to the scientific historian or the art historian.