A Sallust Reader: Selections from Bellum Catilinae and Bellum Iugurthinum, and Historiae
- Author: Victoria E. Pagan
- 6875
- 978-0-86516-687-5
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
- 204
This reader aims to introduce advanced Latin students to the works of Sallust, unique among Roman historians for several reasons. Because he uses standard vocabulary and uncomplicated syntax, Sallust is an accessible author at this level. Unlike other Roman historians whose subject matter was a distant past, Sallust writes about events that occurred in his lifetime. His roller-coaster career afforded him a unique opportunity to critique the inner mechanisms of contemporary Roman politics from the vantage of an outsider.
A Seneca Reader: Selections from Prose and Tragedy
- Author: James Ker
- 7583
- 978-0-86516-758-2
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
- 224
Innovator in the literature of philosophical advising and reshaper of myth in tragedy, at turns inspiring and disturbing: This is Seneca the Younger. A mosaic of readings from four main genres with select follow-up passages showcases Seneca as therapeutic consoler, mirror to the prince, tragedian of the passions, and moral epistolographer—a thinker whose literary voice sounds against the volatility of his times. Seneca spins the republican Cicero's stylistic legacy and Augustan literature's gold into the distinctive silver of the first century CE: concise in encapsulating ideas, inventive in borrowing the vocabulary of everyday life, and with a propensity for using vivid images to depict emotional experience. This is a style the historian Tacitus deemed "œfitted to the ears of his age."
A Suetonius Reader: Selections from the Lives of the Caesars and the Life of Horace
- Author: Josiah Osgood
- 7168
- 978-0-86516-716-2
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
- 159
The popular appeal of Suetonius' Lives of the Caesars is obvious. Who would not thrill reading about the great Julius Caesar's delight in the Senate's bestowal of the right to wear a laurel wreath on all occasions—because it covered his baldness? Or that the Divine Augustus had rotten teeth and wore special platform shoes to make himself look taller?
A Tacitus Reader: Selections from Annales, Historiae, Germania, Agricola, and Dialogus
- Author: Steven H. Rutledge
- 6978
- 978-0-86516-697-4
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
- 248
This edition’s selected passages from Tacitus’ historical and minor works give a sample of a Latin author acknowledged as one of the most difficult—and also the most rewarding. Rutledge presents a Tacitus he unapologetically terms “the greatest of the Roman historians” in reading selections that highlight major subjects and themes: the corruption of power, confrontation with barbarians, and narratives of historically significant episodes, many marked by the era’s signature violence, promiscuity, and murderous death. Tacitus’ stylistic brilliance likewise finds its due here: his powerful language, vivid character portrayal, use of speeches, and the authority he claims for himself as historian. The commentary addresses problems Tacitean syntax and grammar may pose for readers new to the author, and helps to situate Tacitus among other Roman historians.
A Terence Reader: Selections from Six Plays
- Author: William S. Anderson
- 6781
- 978-0-86516-678-3
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
- 127
This volume, intended for third- and fourth-year college and advanced high-school use, presents a selection of annotated passages in Latin from six plays by Terence: Andria, Heauton, Phormio, Hecyra, Eunuchus, and Adelphoe. The introduction discusses Terence's enrichment of the comic genre he inherited from the Greeks and the hallmarks of his second-century BC Latin and its grammar.
A Tibullus Reader: Seven Selected Elegies
- Author: Paul Allen Miller
- 7249
- 978-0-86516-724-7
- Paperback
- 132
Albius Tibullus, considered along with Ovid and Propertius one of the canonical elegists of the Augustan period, was in antiquity deemed the most accomplished of the three. Quintilian sums it up nicely: “In my opinion Tibullus is a very elegant and concise author. There are those who prefer Propertius.” Modern critics, however, have not always been as favorable. The dreamlike quality of Tibullus’s text is sometimes cited as evidence that his poems are smooth or soft, and lacking formal integrity. Paul Allen Miller argues instead for seeing them as a complex tissue of related, interwoven, and sometimes contradictory themes. Miller’s commentary, informed by modern scholarship, accepts the challenge of elucidating the often complex logic of the selected poems.
An Apuleius Reader: Selections from the Metamorphoses
- Author: Ellen Finkelpearl
- 7141
- 978-0-86516-714-8
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
- 198
Read less than it deserves at the undergraduate level, Apuleius' Metamorphoses tells the story of Lucius the ass-man and his encounters with sex, magic, robbers, storytellers, slaves, and finally the Goddess. From the cruel mockery of the Festival of Laughter to the sweet tale of Cupid and Psyche, from adventures that question human-animal boundaries to the profoundly spiritual conclusion, Apuleius constantly mingles the serious and comic, the bizarre and surreal with the quotidian details of ancient life.
An Ovid Reader : Selections from Seven Works
- Author: Carole E. Newlands
- 7223
- 978-0-86516-722-3
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc.
- 224
Ovid’s poetry, once regarded as superficial in comparison to that of other Augustan poets, is now hailed for its artistry, its mastery at storytelling, and the profound influence it has had on literature and art from the poet’s own time to the present day.
Caesar: Selections from his Commentarii De Bello Gallico
- Author: Hans-Friedrich Mueller
- 7788
- 978-0-86516-778-0
- Hardbound
- Bolchazy-Carducci
- 414
This text provides unadapted Latin passages from the Commentarii De Bello Gallico: Book 1.1-7; Book 4.24-35 and the first sentence of Chapter 36; Book 5.24-48; Book 6.13-20 and the English of Books 1, 6, and 7.
It includes all the required English and Latin selections from Caesar's De Bello Gallico for the 2012-2013 AP* Curriculum.
Caesar: Selections from his Commentarii De Bello Gallico
- Author: Hans-Friedrich Mueller
- 7524
- 978-0-86516-752-0
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc.
- 414
This text provides unadapted Latin passages from the Commentarii De Bello Gallico: Book 1.1-7; Book 4.24-35 and the first sentence of Chapter 36; Book 5.24-48; Book 6.13-20 and the English of Books 1, 6, and 7.
It includes all the required English and Latin selections from Caesar's De Bello Gallico for the 2012-2013 AP* Curriculum.
Cicero: On Old Age: De Senectute
- Author: Charles E. Bennett
- 0015
- 978-0-86516-001-9
- Paperback
- Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc.
- 168
The relevance of Cicero's On Old Age transcends time and culture as it examines with superlative clarity the challenging problem of aging.
Cicero: Pro Caelio, 3rd Edition
- Author: Stephen Ciraolo
- 5599
- 978-0-86516-559-5
- Paperback
- 270
Revised edition of one of Cicero's greatest orations provides all the linguistic and background material for the entire, unadapted Latin text of Cicero's Pro Caelio.