"Beard is the bestcommunicator of Classics we have." -- Independent Sunday (UK)
"Starred review. Beard's clear way of explaining times and people we may or may not have heard of makes learning not only fun, but satisfying, and her prose style is easy without being annoyingly breezy. A top-notch introduction to some fairly arcane material, accessible but not patronizing." -- Kirkus Reviews
"Witty, erudite collectionTo Beard, the classical past is alive and kickingand she has the great gift of being able to show just why classics is still a subject worth arguing about." -- Sunday Times (UK)
"These reviews are ideal for providing a basic understanding of classical studies, as they not only pinpoint the strengths and weaknesses of the books she reviews but also elucidate the sometimes tricky nuances of current approaches in the field. Not to be missed by fans of Beard, this will also appeal to readers generally interested in classical studies." -- Library Journal
"Highly engaging." -- Sunday Telegraph (UK)
"With such a champion as Beard to debunk and popularise, the future of the study of classics is assured." -- Daily Telegraph (UK)
"Engagingimpressive Through her lively discussion of modern scholarship, Ms. Beard succeeds in her goal of proving that study of the Classics is still a work in progress not done and dusted."" -- The Economist
"Essayists are like dinner guests: The best are amusing and erudite, the worst think they are. If Cambridge professor Mary Beard's conversation is anything like her wise and elegant book reviews for the Times Literary Supplement, London Review of Books and New York Review of Books, 31 of which are collected in Confronting the Classics, she must be very popular indeed. Throughout, readers will learn something new or look at familiar topics afresh, alternately nodding and grinning." -- M. Carter - The Wall Street Journal
"Offering up 30 years of pointed insights and inquisitions, Cambridge classics professor Beard (The Fires of Vesuvius) returns with a collection of primarily reprinted reviews of her classicist peers work that somehow manages to touch on nearly every notable person, place, and event associated with the Ancient world.. All in all, a smart, adventuresome read." -- Publishers Weekly
"In this thought-provoking collection of essays and book reviews, Cambridge classicist Mary Beard explores the reasons that ancient Greece and Rome still matter. Lively and engaging, Beards scholarship brings Pericles, Antony, Neroand other ancient titansback to life." -- Booklist
"Many of us studied classics not only to read what was written in Latin, but also because poets, writers, and thinkers had blazed a brilliant trail. Beard conveys in her survey of the subject and the people who study it the excitement and romance of that tradition. For someone who has argued vehemently against the need to be glamorous, she makes the study of classics irresistibly attractive." -- A.E. Stallings - American Scholar
"Beards essays in this volume range from humor in ancient Greece to the reputation of the emperor Caligula to the restoration of Roman sculpture. She writes with grace and wit on a vast array of subjects, and she has a novelists gift for selecting odd and revealing details." -- Nick Romeo - The Daily Beast