Eidinow's exploration of the trials of women enriches our understanding of social and legal processes that affected all Athenians, citizen status males or otherwise . . . Eidinow's meticulous detail . . . binds together our fragmentary glimpses of women's lives into a compelling account of the complex intersections of private and public speech, imagined and realized actions and threats, and unofficial religion and civic legal institutions, in a vivid picture of Athens.
Carol Atack, Times Literary Supplement
The author effectively combines philological analysis of a wide range of Greek texts and contemporary social science theory to build her case. A significant study for advanced students and scholars interested in the history of women and law in fourth-century BCE Athens . . . Highly recommended.
CHOICE
Envy, Poison, and Death is a book of great learning and intellectual flair. The three women who are its subject have had a destiny that no one could have expected. Folklorists and anthropologists will see a classicist grappling with a question that they often have to ask themselves: how to understand the mind-set of culturally and/or historically remote persons.
Lowell Edmunds, Folklore