The paper reviews one of the latest entries in the ever-growing catalogue of English language casebooks and manuals on comparative tort law, that is, Thomas Kadner Graziano's Comparative Tort Law. In order to do so, the paper first summarizes the developments in academic production in English on comparative tort law in the last twenty-five years. It then examines against such context the book under review, analyzing its structure, contents and features and showing that Kadner Graziano has been able to build on previous research and to combine different approaches to create his own, original and much needed way of dealing with tort law comparatively.