My hunch is that if I asked someone what they think about Isaac Watts, they'd either answer, "He's a great hymnwriter" or "Who's Isaac Watts?" As one who, before reading this book, would be in the former category - after all, he's written hymns like "Joy To The World," "When I Survey The Wondrous Cross," "I Sing the Mighty Power of God," and "Alas And Did My Savior Bleed" (aka "At the Cross") - I learned there's a lot more to this gentleman.
Graham Benyon wrote his doctoral dissertation about Watts, but he wrote this book in such a way I would not hesitate recommending it to a middle schooler to read. Benyon did a good job of making this easy to understand and enjoyable to read. This is fitting for a biography for Watts, because he wrote songs for younger people as well as his classic hymns. He also wrote catachisms, and made his age appropriate for different ages.
You may know that Watts only wrote hymn lyrics, using meters for existing tunes, which was common for that day (Charles Wesley did the same). Watts also was a pastor, a teacher, and an apologist. When he saw something that he thought should be done better, he'd do that better. For example, he wrote a book on logic which was used at Oxford, Cambridge, and Yale, titled "Logic: The Right Use of Reason in the Inquiry After Truth." That logic book is available on Amazon.
Watts saw the church of his day being so afraid of being over emotional (in those days, they called it being enthusiastic), and encouraged revival. In the areas of preaching, prayer (private and public) and singing, he encouraged doing it with understanding and reason and also from the heart, with godly emotion.
This is my favorite biography, and I highly recommend it.
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