Aeneid 8

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Aeneid 8
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Vergil
Edited by James J. O'Hara
Edited by Randall T. Ganiban
SeriesThe Focus Vergil Aeneid Commentaries
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:208
Dimensions(mm): Height 228,Width 152
Category/Genre Languages
ISBN/Barcode 9781585108800
ClassificationsDewey:871.01
Audience
General
Illustrations 2 maps

Publishing Details

Publisher Focus Publishing/R Pullins & Co
Imprint Focus Publishing/R Pullins & Co
Publication Date 15 March 2018
Publication Country United States

Description

Vergil: Aeneid 8 is part of a new series of commentaries on the Aeneid. Each volume adapts with extensive revisions and additions the commentaries of T. E. Page (1884, 1900), and is edited by a scholar of Roman epic. The present volume offers the Latin text of Book 8 along with maps, extensive notes, and commentary designed to meet the needs of intermediate students of Latin. A two-volume edition of the entire Aeneid designed to meet the needs of advanced students will be derived from the series.

Author Biography

James O'Hara is the George L. Paddison Professor of Latin, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. With Randall Ganiban, he is also General Editor of the forthcoming Vergil: Aeneid 7-12.

Reviews

The new Vergil commentaries from Focus are an exciting resource for almost anyone reading the Aeneid in Latin. . . . The editors recognize that developing core reading skills and involving students in the interpretive questions raised by the poem are not separate objectives. This recognition has resulted in commentaries that enticingly present basic information in a wider setting of observation and enquiry. . . . All in all, the Focus series balances simplicity and subtlety, reminding students at all levels that increasing technical precision and stretching one's interpretive curiosity arefundamentallyone endeavor. - Antonia Syson, Purdue University, in Teaching Classical Languages (CAMWS) "[F]or accessibility, affordability, and portability, O'Hara's commentary is hard to beat. I fully intend to use it when I next teach Aeneid 8 in my advanced Latin class, and I can heartily recommend that others do too." Brian P. Loar, in Bryn Mawr Classical Review