The World of Rome: An Introduction to Roman Culture
J**H
As good as The World of Athens
Initially, I was a bit afraid to buy this book. I had read "The World of Athens" and thought this book "The World of Rome" would not be able to match it. I was wrong. "The World of Rome" is absolutely incredible, just like its counterpart about Ancient Greek History.This book concentrates on a lot of important and accurate information. If you want a very good book on the subject, one that really unites both in depth descriptions of some very relevant matters and conciseness, I think you should buy this book and I don't think you will regret it.Mostly, I was very afraid to buy this book because of its table of contents, which doesn't tell that much about the book and can be misleading. If that's your case also, don't trust the table of contents. The book is much better than the table of contents may suggest.I also recommend this book if you already know a lot about Roman History and want to read a relatively short book that helps you organize many different ideas, one that enables you to remember things that we naturally forget after time. If that's what you are looking for, I believe this is a great book for that also.
K**E
Very enjoyable
I think this is a wonderful addition to the bookshelf of anyone interested in the history of Rome! I bought it for a class I’m taking but I think it’s enjoyable enough to keep around once the semester is over.
S**R
It's the book
Got the book for a class. It arrived within days, great condition. I never opened it once ahah. The class ended up being so easy that it wasn't necessary.
G**R
Enjoyable read, especially for social history
I bought this book while traveling and finished the better half of it before arriving home two days later.The core of the book provides an excellent overview of Roman culture in Geertz's sense of culture as what one would need to know to exist in everyday life as a member of the society. Despite the ambition of such a scope, I found the book to be extremely well organized with minimal repetition. There are very interesting discussions of such things as the economy, family, class, and slaves/freedmen. Each is a very solid introduction to the topic and interesting enough to provoke further inquiry through specialty works -- though unfortunately the lack of bibliographic or footnote references to secondary scholarship means the reader must discover such expansions independently. On the other hand the multiple indices (Latin concordance, general subjects, proper names) are excellent.In contrast to the core of the book on Roman culture, the beginning few chapters on chronological history are rushed and muddled with debates about whether the Gracchi were good or bad that may be lost on a new reader. The historical aspect of the book is good to provide context to the discussion of culture but someone primarily interested in, say, the dictatorship of Sulla would be disappointed by the abbreviated treatment.
M**N
print is too small
print is so small I cannot read it.
C**N
The Joy of the World of Rome!
Most Roman reference books seem to present the information in a very muddling way. The World of Rome is a must-have for all those who want to learn about Rome in a progressive, easy to use way. The book is divided into sections on life, religion and is particularly helpful in understanding the poltical systems and leaders. The book covers the period from 1000Bc to 476Ad making it an essential item for the ancient historian who is looking for reference without wanting to spend hours looking through waffle.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 months ago