This biography of Fernando Pessoa by Richard Zenith will hardly be surpassed by those that succeed it. In the first place, we have here a profound connoisseur of Pessoa’s work, and not only of his life. It seems obvious to say, although perhaps it is not so obvious that the most complex task in making a biography of an intellectual is to narrate his intellectual trajectory. For an artist like Fernando Pessoa, whose for him his greatest virtue was his own multiplicity, this is a very risky undertaking. But Zenith faces it and presents us with a serene vision of the meanderings of the poet’s intellectual evolution, without falling into the temptation of conforming the biography to his personal interpretation. The chapters are intelligently organized, and the narrative, at first chronological, allows itself to go back and forth in time when the theme demands it. And then we see the details, the beautiful details that only acquire their due importance when contextualized by a competent biographer, such as the honorable and moving tribute to Uncle Cunha and his invaluable contribution in amusingly and creatively instigating the imagination of the little poet. Pessoa: a biography is a work worthy of the most sincere praise, and whose author has proven himself worthy of thanks that will extend for many generations to come.