"In this engagingly readable book T E Lawrence rubs shoulders with Wagner and both are seen as being on the cusp between imperial confidence and the 'nervous condition' of modernism. Peter Childs' subtle reading of specific texts is informed by a probing and wide-ranging analysis of the late colonial period and its anxieties, not just about control but about the exercise of power and about conceptual questions relating to time and mapping. The range of literary works itself provides the reader with a new map of the intersection between modernism and the post-colonial." Professor Angela Smith (Emeritus), Department of English Studies, University of Stirling, UK