"Nicholson meticulously demonstrates that athletic victors adopted a particular stance toward the Deinomenid empire when they chose to be honored either in epinician or through oral narratives. Decoding for the first time the politicization of these competing genres in the Greek west, this book will be required reading for all interested in the ideological operations of ancient Greek literature." -Margaret Foster, Indiana University
"This is a brilliant book. Nicholson combines breathtaking control of the history, archaeology, numismatics, and topography of Sicily and South Italy with an ambitious new model of epinician and local oral narratives as co-existing, competing forms. The result is a richly textured account of the politics of form in the history of the Greek West." -Leslie Kurke, University of California, Berkeley