New perspectives gleaned from G.'s volume will inspire readers to revisit the Letters, where they now might discover a new side of the author and statesman, and perhaps even encounter a more likeable, relatable Pliny, if only because his human imperfection feels rather familiar.
The Classical Review
Mr. Gibson is a subtle reader of Latin and a master of using landscape to bring Pliny's pomposities and insecurities alive.... Few recent books on ancient Rome better communicate the joy of studying a society so connected to our own and yet so different from it.
Peter Stothard, Wall Street Journal
A reader who comes to Man of High Empire for a conventional biography--for relevant evidence gathered and scrupulously weighed, anecdotes vividly relayed, the evocation of a fascinating era and the significance of a life considered--will certainly not be disappointed. Yet the book offers much more, reflecting in part on the art of biography itself.... A wise and humane biography, it is finely crafted and deserves sustained attentiveness from the reader to match the patient skill of its author. Gibson writes beautifully, with gentle wit, and his insights are so grounded in vivid landscapes as to linger in the mind long after the book has been laid aside.
Times Literary Supplement
Meticulously researched...this publication is magisterial. Meriting special attention are Gibson's detailed treatment of the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE and, in the later pages, his observations regarding Pliny's persecutory encounter with Christians in Pontus-Bythynia, where he was governor for the last three years of his life. Summing Up: Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers.
J. S. Louzonis, CHOICE
The marriage of philology with social history is peculiarly apt to its subject, and would surely have pleased Pliny.
Christopher Whitton, Greece & Rome
An unhurried, well organized, complete and beautifully rendered exploration of every question and aspect to be seriously investigated about this Roman legal prosecutor, orator, senator, Roman Consul, provincial governor, and literary stylist who gives us our earliest first-hand account of the eruption of Vesuvius.
The Heythrop Journal
Meticulously researched..., this publication is magisterial. Meriting special attention are Gibson's detailed treatment of the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE and, in the later pages, his observations regarding Pliny's persecutory encounter with Christians in Pontus-Bythynia, where he was governor for the last three years of his life.
CHOICE
Gibson suggests that this book requires a great deal of specialist knowledge before it can be appreciated. He does himself a disservice because the background descriptions of the various milieus that he provides are so comprehensive and lucid that even someone with a moderate knowledge of the classical world can enjoy the book. At such a modest price it is highly recommended for the regular Classics for All reader -- not least for its perceptive analysis of the role of the biographer.
Roger Barnes, Classics for All
This innovative biography of Pliny the Younger, written by a renowned authority on his letters, offers a complex, updated and clear-sighted portrait not only of the man, but also of his times.... Insight, perspicacity, wittiness, an eye for landscape are, in my judgement, the main assets of this enjoyable and evocative book, which will certainly be a source of inspiration.
Rosario Moreno Soldevila, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
The background descriptions of the various milieus that he provides are so comprehensive and lucid that even someone with a moderate knowledge of the classical world can enjoy the book. At such a modest price it is highly recommended for the regular Classics for All reader — not least for its perceptive analysis of the role of the biographer.
Classics for All
In this modern and methodologically savvy biography, Gibson takes us on a tour of the places of Pliny's life, with Cicero, Tacitus, Epictetus, and Augustine as color commentators. Like Pliny himself we move from Como to the Italian countryside and on to Rome and Rome's Black Sea province of Bithynia, watching him grow into the roles available in each imperial context. A tour de force!
Cynthia Damon, University of Pennsylvania
Roy Gibson expertly brings the younger Pliny to life in this lucid and accessible biography
a state-of-the-art production that meticulously recounts and reconstructs what is known and can be inferred about this storied man of letters.Gareth Williams, Columbia University
This is a unique biography and a very accessible window into the life of Pliny. Most importantly, it demonstrates that Pliny was not self-conceited and was perceptive about himself and Rome's future.
Matthew Mordue, The Journal of Classics Teaching
Roy Gibson's Man of High Empire is a biography about Pliny the Younger. Pliny's Letters are a useful source for topics such as Roman slavery, the roles of men and women in the Roman Empire, the emergence of Christianity, the political climate of the imperial senate, and of course the eruption of Vesuvius....This is a unique biography and a very accessible window into the life of Pliny. Most importantly, it demonstrates that Pliny was not self-conceited and was perceptive about himself and Rome's future.
Matthew Mordue, The Journal of Classics Teaching