Emperor of Rome
by Mary Beard
Emperor of Rome by British classicist Mary Beard covers a number of emperors. According to a synopsis first reported in The Bookseller, “it’s much more than the usual emperor-by-emperor collection of biographies…For most Romans, one ruler was much like another and she takes a thematic approach instead – looking at the fact and fiction of these rulers, asking what they did and why, and how we have got such a lurid view of them. The themes are autocracy, corruption and conspiracy – and also the day-to-day practicalities of the emperors’ lives (who did the cooking, or took the dictation?).”
Recommendations from our site
“This book focuses not on any individual but is a general look at the job and what it entailed. The book takes its material from a 300-year period, starting with Julius Caesar and ending with the Lebanon-born emperor Alexander Severus. The analysis is divided into chapters like ‘Power Dining’, ‘Time Off?’ and ‘Emperors Abroad.’ It’s neatly done and captures Beard’s abiding interest in image and projection of power (one of the illustrations is of an earring with a picture of a Roman emperor on it).” Read more...
Notable Nonfiction of Fall 2023
Sophie Roell, Journalist
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