What The Reviewers Say

Positive

Based on 9 reviews

Alaric the Goth: An Outsider's History of the Fall of Rome

Douglas Boin

What The Reviewers Say

Positive

Based on 9 reviews

Alaric the Goth: An Outsider's History of the Fall of Rome

Douglas Boin

Rave
Wendy Smith,
The Boston Globe
Lacking personal particulars, Boin paints a richly detailed portrait of the world in which Alaric maneuvered, defined by the thrashings of an empire in turmoil.
Positive
Cullen Murphy,
The Atlantic
... a smart book for the general reader.
Positive
Sarah Rice,
Booklist
Without his thoughts having survived, the subtitle, An Outsider’s History, feels more aptly applied to sixth century, medieval, and eighteenth-century historians who used Alaric’s deeds to bolster their criticisms of Rome as well as the modern reader peering at a world so far apart but not so unlike our own, in which bigotry, inequity, and hedonism war with ideas of inclusion, freedom, and equal aspirations for all. Anyone who appreciates vividly detailed stories of the past or is morbidly curious about the dying days of a wealthy, self-important, diverse, autocratic global power should pick this up..
Mixed
James Romm,
The Wall Street Journal
First impressions count for a great deal, and this first encounter with Alaric in Mr. Boin’s narrative—one that need not have even occurred, given the unreliability of the sources—hardly bears out the view that he later tries to adduce. He seems to want to have it both ways in his presentation of Alaric, making him out to be a dashing brigand at some points, an oppressed Roman wannabe at others. Readers of Alaric the Goth will often be uncertain which side its subject is on or what he is fighting for.
Mixed
Kathleen McCallister,
Library Journal
A serviceable study of Alaric himself, but more valuable as a resource offering a look at the Roman Empire midway through its fall..
Positive
Steve Donoghue,
The Ope
... assembles everything modern scholarship can know or reasonably guess about this figure, although the sheer amount of doubt and patchwork that remains accounts for both the relative brevity of the book and for the fact that Boin is often prompted to issue factual disclaimers.
Positive
Susan Babbitt,
The New York Journal of Books
This book is highly worth reading, among other things, for intriguing detail about ancient life, not just in the 'Eternal City' itself but in Athens to which wealthy Romans escaped and sent their children to be educated ..
Positive
Publishers Weekly
... eye-opening.
Positive
Kirkus
A fresh look at a little-known corner of the history of the Roman Empire.