Review by Choice Review
Indisputably, Duncan's focus is on an important period of Roman history: the years immediately following the end of the Third Punic War through the conclusion of the Sullan dictatorship (roughly 146-80 BCE). The narrative is chronological and written in an engagingly colloquial manner. For general readers and lower-level undergraduates with an interest in, but no familiarity with, the period, this book will be an adequate introduction to the pertinent personalities and issues. Upper-level undergraduates, however, should look elsewhere. The endnotes indicate an almost exclusive reliance on the primary sources, but the lack of substantive discussions of each ancient author's biases or reliability produces a free-flowing narrative with nagging questions of its veracity. Typical of a book in the popular history genre, the story is touted as both a pertinent and cautionary tale of empire. Because the "final" storm that instituted the Augustan Principate did not end Rome's empire (which continued for almost four more centuries), the lessons to be learned are unclear. Moreover, poor proofreading hampers the readability of the text (the numerous contiguous occurrences of the letters h and n are replaced by Ú; e.g., see pp. xxi, 26, 43, 50, among about a dozen others). Summing Up: Optional. Public, general, and lower-level undergraduate collections only. --Robert T. Ingoglia, Saint Thomas Aquinas College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
Plenty of people, notes Duncan (creator of the History of Rome podcast), are familiar with the facts of the end of the Roman Republic, including Julius Caeser's dictatorship and the rise of the emperor Augustus. But far fewer could tell you about the Gaius Marius's consulships, Sulla's march on Rome, or other events that weakened the Republic. Roughly covering the 130s to the 80s BCE, Duncan makes an excellent effort at familiarizing readers with those events. He lays out a narrative of how external conflicts, internal uprisings, political corruption, and even well-intentioned movements toward reform eroded the established rules and unwritten social codes that kept the straining Republican government together. While Duncan refrains from making explicit comparisons to modern events, threaded throughout the book is the reminder that the issues that provoked Roman unrest-economic and social inequality, questions of citizenship and legal rights, and the employment of intimidation and violence as political tools-parallel issues the United States is currently grappling with. VERDICT Award-winning podcaster Duncan proves to be just as effective at working in a written medium, presenting historical personalities and complex situations with clarity and verve.-Kathleen McCallister, Tulane Univ., New Orleans © 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.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Exploring the significant period from 146 to 78 B.C.E., which laid the groundwork for the violent decline and fall of the Roman Empire.Award-winning history podcaster Duncan offers a lively, extremely well-informed chronicle of nearly seven decades of Roman political and social life, less well-known than the age of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Marc Antony that followed. Drawing on ancient sources as well as modern histories, the author reveals chilling parallels to our own time, including "rising economic inequality, dislocation of traditional ways of life, increasing political polarization, the breakdown of unspoken rules of political conduct, the privatization of the military, rampant corruption, endemic social and ethnic prejudice, battles over access to citizenship and voting rights, ongoing military quagmires, the introduction of violence as a political tool, and a set of elites so obsessed with their own privileges that they refused to reform the system in time to save it." Duncan's fast-paced narrative covers the rivalries, wars, sieges, massacres, land grabs, political reforms, secret negotiations, triumphs, betrayals, and defeats that characterized life for the powerful, aristocratic patricians and the plebeians and slaves who comprised the rest of society. Rome faced challenges within its borders and beyond, as it expanded into Spain, Gaul, Africa, and Asia. Among the most mysterious was the incursion of the Cimbri, a migrating horde of hundreds of thousands, perhaps from what is now Denmark, "simply looking for an uninhabited territory to live in." Provoked into battle, the Cimbri defeated Rome three times before moving on to Spain. Duncan writes with evident enthusiasm, and his style is accessible and colloquial: a political gambit, he notes, "sent conservatives in the Senate through the roof"; a young patrician caroused with "the bottom feeders of the Roman social order"; one political aspirant was "the perfect guy for the job." The huge cast of characters, likely to be unfamiliar to all but specialist readers, at times overwhelms the narrative, while the maps and timeline at the beginning are helpful. Crucial decades in the history of the ancient world vividly rendered. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review