Iceland’s Road to Independence: Home Rule and Sovereignty by Adrian E. Markham follows Iceland’s transformation from a distant dependency into a self-governing republic built on intellect, patience, and moral resolve. Beginning with the cultural awakening of the nineteenth century, Markham traces how poets, scholars, and reformers redefined their nation’s identity through education and law. At a time when revolutions swept across Europe, Iceland’s path to freedom unfolded through dialogue, debate, and endurance. The book explores the reestablishment of the Alþingi, the political philosophy of Jón Sigurðsson, and the leadership of Hannes Hafstein, Iceland’s first minister under Home Rule. Markham examines how the rise of literacy, newspapers, and voluntary associations created an informed public ready for self-government. The story moves through the granting of limited autonomy in 1874, the achievement of Home Rule in 1904, and the Act of Union in 1918 that recognized Iceland as a sovereign state under the Danish crown. Drawing on letters, parliamentary debates, and contemporary journalism, Markham brings to life the thinkers and citizens who turned endurance into strategy. He shows how the growth of Reykjavík, the expansion of education, and the rise of civic institutions transformed a poor island society into a modern nation capable of governing itself. Richly detailed and written with clarity and insight, Iceland’s Road to Independence offers a compelling portrait of a people who proved that freedom could be achieved not through violence, but through reason, discipline, and faith in their own traditions.