Those who are about to die A day in the life of a Roman gladiator

Harry Sidebottom

Book - 2026

"See ancient Rome, and peer into the Roman mind, through the eyes of a gladiator-from the evening before the Games at the Colosseum to the evening after. What did a gladiator feel when he stepped out onto the sand of the Colosseum, his life in the balance? What ran through the minds of the masses there to witness his likely execution? And how did this bloodthirsty ritual come to exist in the first place? In Those Who Are About to Die, Harry Sidebottom-an internationally bestselling novelist and professor of classical history at Oxford-pulls us into the arena, and into the homes and forums of ancient Rome, taking the reader on an eye-opening, twenty-four-hour tour through Roman life at the height of the gladiatorial games, from the firs...t century BC to the second century AD. We follow the gladiators through the schools (ludi) where they trained, watch in awe as the massive event unfolds-from the gambling at the pre-festival dinner to the dawn rush to get a seat at the arena to the resounding music, the elaborate stage sets, and, yes, the public executions that served as lunch-break entertainment-and we unlearn all the bogus movie tropes (no, alas, gladiators did not have ripped bods, they were kept fleshy so they'd bleed more). Broken down by time of day-Vesper, Prima Vigilia, Secunda Vigilia, up through the following sunset (Solis Occasus)-Those Who Are About to Die offers illuminating insights into every aspect of the life and mind of ancient Romans, their social mores and hierarchies, their thoughts on death and sex and violence, and the myths and dreams that fueled the spectacle. With wit and authority, Those Who Are About to Die gives us the truth behind a figure we can't stop imagining"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Documents d'information
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
Harry Sidebottom (author)
Edition
First hardcover edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593801765
9780593687673
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Into the fray. The Roman Empire will likely never go out of style. For the sword-and-sandal set, this book charts the daily life of a Roman gladiator, from morning bread to evening dreams. A lecturer in ancient history at Lincoln College in Britain, Sidebottom writes that gladiators were "at the heart of Roman culture," discussed by philosophers, cheered by throngs, and admired as "sex symbols"--even though they were overweight and often had "bad teeth, bad breath, and bodies marked and altered, sometimes to the point of deformity, by combat." The gladiator's day involved sleeping, eating, preparing for the fight and, of course, demonstrating prowess. Among those shows were clashes with beasts as well as other men. Staged scenes of hunting and of battle offered up symbolic, controlled representations of the two key formative activities of the Roman man. And if the animals let loose inside this diorama of death were exotic--elephants, rhinos, tigers, bears--so, too, were the men. The gladiators often were recruited from the enslaved population, and a spectator might see men from Greece, Iberia, North Africa, and Asia Minor. Readers get a lot of detail, but what they really get is a double history of theatricality and privacy. The gladiator was the object of spectatorship, and his fights and feints contributed a larger, performative quality to Roman life. But the gladiator was looked upon in private, too. No one was ever alone, even when going to the bathroom. (Sidebottom offers an extended tour of the sights, sounds, and smells of the public latrines.) Read this book, then, not just to slake your cinematic thirst for Rome, but for the rich details that show us how these men who were about to die sought to preserve their inner lives behind the public show. An earthy, vivid tour of daily life among ancient warriors. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.