In conclusion, this volume, as I mention at the beginning of my review, serves as a valuable - worth reading - supplement of Greek epigram since it explores its literary evolution and its consequent reception through late antiquity; many perspectives and functions are discussed, such as the different kinds of this literary genre, its form and its nature, that deserve further attention from modern scholarship. Well-known scholars, experts of epigrams, gather their knowledge to offer their audience valuable details about epigram anthologies, compilations and paratexts, as well as many literary aspects, such as the ekphrasis and the visual act of reading; I totally recommend this intriguing book that raises further questions worthy to be explored not only by Academics and students, but also by anyone who wishes to learn about the Greek epigram from its acme during Hellenistic period down to its reception in the early Byzantine era.
CJ-Online
The volume at hand is not just a miscellany of papers on epigrams, but a carefully edited and well-balanced collection of in-depth studies from experts in the field. It is a finely produced book, highlighting the different lenses through which epigram can be diachronically read and interpreted, and a must-read for those searching for the secrets behind the alluring power of this miniature poetic genre.
Phoenix
This is an important book; publications of conference proceedings are often effective at giving a snapshot of research in a given field, but this volume goes beyond that, incorporating novel contributions by many distinguished scholars in Hellenistic, Imperial and Early Byzantine epigram. Although targeted at specialists, for whom this volume is indispensable, for anyone with a passing interest in post-classical Greek poetry, it provides ample evidence for why the study of epigram is enjoying renewed interest.
CJ~Online
'The book ... is of a very high quality because of its content, the work of the editors, and the beautiful printing of the Oxford University Press. ...The volume constitutes an excellent update on the way in which the epigrammatic genre is read by today's philology, it contains innovative analysis of specific epigrams, and, above all, it shows the new perspectives and lines of interpretation about this genre and the enormous possibilities they offer.
Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Like the 2013 conference from which it developed, this valuable new volume gathers established and up-and-coming stars of contemporary epigram studies with the explicit aim of understanding epigram as a genre writ large across a millennium, from Hellenistic through to the early Byzantine revival of the sixth century. This was the age of Agathias, Julian of Egypt, Paul the Silentiary, and Macedonius, all of whom are amply treated ...one of this volume's signal services to the discipline is to remind us all just how capacious it is, and how wondrous. The volume is scholar-like and well produced, and for once represents properly good value.
Classical World
This volume, a valuable contribution to the ever-growing literature on Greek epigram, will definitely find its place next to other collected volumes dealing with this remarkable poetic form. Readers who have the patience to go through the book from beginning to end will be rewarded by the many perceptive interpretations of individual passages, the novel topics, new insights on often discussed themes as well as the high quality of the scholarship of all contributions ... it is a rich, meticulous and thought-provoking presentation of a genre that (ut quibusdam videtur) almost defies comprehensiveness.
Classical Review