By far the most comprehensive work I have read on the life, work and influence of the painter and poet Elizabeth Siddal. Marsh does not shy away from the many fictionalised and fantasy portrayals of Siddal, but places them in a framework of biographic, literary and art-histories. The author both traces the intertextual Siddal, and attempts to differentiate her from the real artist. Very useful thesis source, with a comprehensive bibliography of further reading, this is also a compelling read in its own right. Published in 1989, Marsh's subject is ripe for further development, but this is a fantastic grounding in Siddal's life, work and enduring legend.