The book is well written, with the prose being pleasing and enjoyable to read. Both general and scholarly audiences can gain substantial insights into a broad range of subjects from W.'s efforts, which have done justice to the fascinating epoch that was the early Hellenistic period.
V. VIJAYARAGHAVAN, The Classical Review
The Making of a King is an extremely welcome addition to scholarship, and it does illuminate what it sets out to illuminate. Readers will find it a superb introduction to the history of the period and will profit from it regardless of their level of prior experience.
John Holton, Newcastle University, UK, Royal Studies Journal
This would make a fine addition to any course on the rise and fall of Macedon and its re-emergence.
Danny Pucknell, The Journal of Classics Teaching
the book is vividly written, draws attention to the problem of the scarcity of sources and the importance of epigraphic material, and addresses numerous topics.
Sabine Müller, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Waterfield succeeds in putting forth a brilliantly written account of one of the least known and most underestimated figures in Greek history alongside the third-century historical context out of which he emerged. Both the general reader without any prior knowledge and the student who already knows his way around these issues will gain from this study.
Benjamin Pedersen, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Waterfield paints a fascinating image of Hellenistic court life and of Antigonus' intellectual interests.
Kostas Vlassopoulos, Greece & Rome Vol. 70.2