this volume's overall contribution to a deeper awareness of how Sappho was received in Rome is unquestionable.
Giuseppe Bocchi, EOS: Commentarii Societatis Philologae Polonorum
Following the important discoveries of new fragments of the poetry of Sappho,1 Thea Thorsen and Stephen Harrison have undertaken the publication of a volume devoted for the first time, and with no claim to being exhaustive, to the influence of Sappho on Roman authors from Lucretius to Martial.
Antonio Ramírez de Verger, University of Huelva, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
This is a thoroughly worthwhile book and a credit to the two editors. It will reinvigorate everyone with an interest in the first feminist poet.
Stuart Lyons, Classics for All
Roman Receptions of Sappho covers all this material exhaustively, and includes an extremely valuable collection of ancient texts referring to Sappho, in Latin and Greek, with good clear translations.
Mildred Faintly, 96th of October - Tales of the Extraordinary