Blunt’s book is thoroughly researched and with many details, including quotes from Linnaeus’s correspondence, giving the flavor of the man. It provides a compleat picture of Linnaeus– ambitious, proud, early struggling for funds, loving friend, happy father, admired professor; even doctor - critical of coffee but fond of tobacco. The book is very readable and anecdotal, as it follows Linnaeus in his travels and career, identifies various plants he discovered or named, and shows the difficulties in finding acceptance for the binomial system. Yet it leaves me with a couple of questions. I would like more explanation as to why the binomial system was so needed at the time. Also, I would like to learn more about the long-term results of these expeditions and discoveries. Did they lead to new plants being introduced, new agricultural methods, new medicines? It's lovely to see the connection across the centuries and continents, that many of the plants we know here in Oregon were described by Linnaeus.