Review by Choice Review
The Landmark Julius Caesar is the fifth volume in the Landmark series of ancient histories. Like previous volumes in the series, it contains excellent new translations prepared by two leading Caesar scholars of the five works by Caesar found in manuscript, as listed in the title. A hallmark of the Landmark translations is the abundant reference material supporting the translation, and that is true of this volume also. Besides numerous illustrations, battle diagrams, sidebar notes, and footnotes, the translation is accompanied by an extensive introduction to Caesar's life and works, book and chapter summaries, an annotated list of ancient authors, glossary, detailed index, nine reference maps, and 47 appendixes divided into five groups: Caesar's life, his world, contemporary warfare, literary qualities of Caesar's commentaries, and highlights of his campaigns. There are two innovations in this work. For the first time, the editors treat the five books of the Corpus Caesarianum as a single work consisting of 14 books. Equally original, only four of the appendixes appear in the print volume. Forty-three of the appendixes are contained in an accompanying website (http://www.thelandmarkcaesar.com) as "web essays," where they can be freely accessed and downloaded. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. --Stanley M. Burstein, emeritus, California State University, Los Angeles
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review
CUBA ON THE VERGE Edited by Leila Guerriero. (Ecco, $26.99.) Twelve writers explore this moment of transition in a post-Castro Cuba, as it manifests in music, art and even baseball, the landmark julius caesar Edited by Kurt A. Raaflaub. (Pantheon, $50.) This tome brings together all the written works of the statesman and military commander, ft's mostly a series of accounts of wars he waged, from the Gallic War to the African War, which turned the Roman republic into an empire, should the tent be burning like that? By Bill Heavey. (Atlantic Monthly, $25.) A suburban dad who loves hunting and fishing, Heavey has been writing a column for Field & Stream for over two decades, and this collection ranges from a deer archery hunt to the time he crashed a 44-foot houseboat in Florida. Christopher hitchens: the last interview (Melville House, $15.99.) The always provocative Christopher Hitchens died six years ago, but his presence can still be felt. As part of its "Last Interview" series, Melville House pulls together some of Hitchens's greatest dialogues, each sparkling with intelligence and wit. three daughters of eve By Elif Shafak. (Bloomsbury, $27.) Shafak's novel takes place over the course of a dinner party in Istanbul on a night when terrorist attacks occur across the city. Through her main character, a wealthy socialite, Shafak, one of Turkey's most acclaimed authors, explores the many tensions that exist in a society struggling toward modernity. "I recently decided to read Cormac McCarthy's first three novels. This was, to understate it, an odd decision for this time of year. The world is bedecked in white lights, and my brain is filled with misshapen things. The books are by turns brilliant and exasperating, the orchard keeper, McCarthy's 1965 debut, involves two men, one of them a whiskey bootlegger, and a boy, connected in ways that are often willfully incomprehensible. The novel's who-what-when-where is a house deep in the woods with its lights out. His third book, child of god, is a far easier read; syntactically, at least. Its contents are grislier though, involving a deeply disturbed man-child who is described, on Page 4, as "a child of God much like yourself perhaps." That sentence becomes the book's central provocation as the man misunderstands, murders and defiles several people along his life's blind path. I'm halfway through his second, outer dark, as I write this. It involves a woman's search for her lost newborn, the product of an incestuous relationship with her brother. Happy Holidays!" - JOHN WILLIAMS, DAILY BOOKS EDITOR AND STAFF WRITER, ON WHAT HE'S READING.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 14, 2019]
Review by Library Journal Review
This comprehensive collection of Julius Caesar's works incorporates Caesar's Gallic War, Civil War, and other writings into a single volume. Translated by Raaflaub (classics, Brown Univ.; Companion to Archaic Greece), the texts are accompanied by information-rich footnotes and annotations. Especially helpful are the many maps presented throughout. Photographs of Roman artifacts, including coins, reliefs, landscapes, and statuary, provide readers with a well-rounded perspective of Roman history. Latin students will find the translations helpful for difficult passages. In addition, this volume succeeds as a wonderful reference to the late Roman Republic. The appendixes include a "Who's Who in Caesar," documenting informative yet quick references to the many people connected to Caesar. Other appendixes supply listings of Roman currency values, calendar systems, and military organization. Raaflaub and Cynthia Damon's (classics, Univ. of Pennsylvania; Caesar's Civil War) introduction fleshes out their subject's life and career. VERDICT An excellent corpus collection and reference for classicists and historians. Highly recommended for classical departments.-Jeffrey Meyer, Mt. Pleasant P.L., IA © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.