Lexington Books
Pages: 448
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-1237-3 • Hardback • June 2007 • $176.00 • (£137.00)
978-0-7391-2242-6 • Paperback • May 2007 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
978-0-7391-5741-1 • eBook • June 2007 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Lee Fratantuono is William Francis Whitlock Professor of Latin at Ohio Wesleyan University.
Chapter 1 Arms and the Man . . .
Chapter 2 All Fell Silent . . .
Chapter 3 After It Seemed Best . . .
Chapter 4 But the Queen . . .
Chapter 5 Meanwhile Sure Aeneas . . .
Chapter 6 So He Spoke, Weeping . . .
Chapter 7 You Also, Dying . . .
Chapter 8 As Turnus Raised . . .
Chapter 9 And While These Things . . .
Chapter 10 The House of Olympus . . .
Chapter 11 Dawn Left the Ocean . . .
Chapter 12 As Turnus Sees . . .
At last, a commentary on the Aeneid that doesn't need more decoding devices than Virgil's poem! Dr. Fratantuono's book stands apart for its adherence to a sensible, and yet profound, analysis of a poem that too often in the last several decades hasbeen the testing ground for any number of new approaches to literary criticism. F begins with a heartfelt lament on the way Books VII-XII have been practically ignored in the curricula of American Classical education at all levels. His commentary attemptsto correct this by paying due attention to what V himself considered to be the greater part of his poem. One of my favorite features of F's book is the way the author weaves into his commentary the relevant passages from the poem, and, in so doing, keeps the commentary focused strictly on the passages. The translations, which by F's own admission, do not aspire to any 'literary greatness,' are still some of the best I have ever read. (Perhaps F's description of all translations of the Aeneid as 'betrayals' of the original Latin poem is in fact a tad too harsh.) Like V, who did not compose his opus in a 'linear fashion' but who worked on individual sections as the spirit moved him, F chose to write a commentary which, while remarkably coherent, ca
— Blaise Nagy
Madness Unchained is truly a stunning achievement! Fratantuono?s engaging commentary on Virgil?s Aeneid, written in lucid and economical prose, has something to offer everyone, from novice readers of the epic to seasoned, veteran scholars. There is muchto glean from these pages, whether one dips in to read the author?s comments on individual scenes or uses the commentary to accompany a reading of Virgil?s epic in its entirety. One of Fratantuono?s primary contributions to Virgilian scholarship is theway in which he treats the epic as a whole, illustrating brilliantly that the poem is more than merely a sum of its individual parts. The reader will appreciate Fratantuono?s close and perceptive reading of the epic together with his masterful and authoritative survey of existing scholarship. This commentary will prove itself as a worthy sourcebook for generations of Virgil readers to come..
— Mary McHugh
a wonderful book, because with its well-versed learning in all aspects of Vergilian scholarship it inspires its readers to think independently.....
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Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-/upper-division undergraduates.....
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Fratantuono's detailed, image-by-image and often even line-by-line examination is the most thorough analysis of The Aeneid to appear in decades. It has the great virtue of not shying away from the most difficult cruces in the long interpretative history of the work, and it offers fresh insights into many of them. The readings he offers of individual passages are frequently not only provocative but also suggestive of further possibilities for extended exploration. In short, this is a book that will challenge many of us to rethink our presuppositions about many an aspect of Virgil's epic...
— Robert S. Dupree