"It is always good to find a new book on the shelves that regards wine with both pleasure and common sense, including a good deal about manners and drunkenness. . . . [<i>How to Drink</i> is] an enjoyable read and . . . makes good, genial sense at a time when wine is now being taken far too seriously as a subject to be put under a microscope rather than be sloshed into a glass."<b>---John Mariani, <i>Forbes</i></b>
"[How to Drink is] a fetching translation . . . I recommend it, as much for its hints about drinking ‘sustainably and with discrimination’ as for its wry warnings about excess."<b>---Roger Kimball, <i>Spectator US</i></b>
"[A] lively modern rendition . . . [<i>How to Drink</i>] mashes up a <i>How to Win Friends and Influence People Under the Influence</i> sort of self-help book, a snapshot of a binge-drinking culture 500 years ago and a personal airing of grievances through the lens of one entertaining, wildly self-contradictory and extremely cantankerous tutor."<b>---Ben O’Donnell, <i>WineSpectator.com</i></b>
"If you can escape the world for a couple of days, bring this delightful book with you and cue up your Pandora 'Circa 1500' playlist . . . a balance of elegance and boisterousness."<b>---Lana Bortolot, <i>Forbes</i></b>
"Fontaine has done a good job in resurrecting an amusing enough <i>oeuvre</i> for those who enjoy exploring such highways and byways."<b>---Peter Jones, <i>Classics for All</i></b>
"[<i>How to Drink</i>] serves as relevant social commentary for today, railing, with wit and humor, against toxic masculinity and overindulgence while providing advice on how to win drinking games. It’s a great addition to your bartending library."<b>---Matt Kettman, <i>Santa Barbara Independent</i></b>
"I found this book fascinating . . . I recommend <i>How to Drink</i> for anyone who enjoys history, the social aspects of alcohol, and the fact that some things never seem to change through the ages!"
TheBrewholder.com
"I adored this quirky little book. It’s half a millennium old and relevant. It’s vulnerably human, capricious, mercurial, inconsistent, wise, ridiculous, passionate and poetic. It’s unintentionally hilarious."<b>---Tamlyn Currin, <i>jancisrobinson.com</i></b>
"[<i>How to Drink</i>] is a witty, entertaining and well produced book, whose editor/translator is clearly well-matched to the subject-matter: in Fontaine’s capable hands, Obsopoeus is anything but an acquired taste."<b>---Gary Vos, <i>The Journal of Classics Teaching</i></b>
"This is a fun little book; it is also a scholarly edition of a little-known sixteenth-century didactic poem, accompanied by an eminently readable translation—an unusual and commendable combination. . . . We should be thankful to Michael Fontaine for undertaking this edition and translation, and to Princeton University Press for publishing it. . . . Obsopoeus might well be proud of how his poem has been presented to twenty-first-century readers."<b>---David Money, <i>Neo-Latin News</i></b>