Rather than provide us with merely a biography of a magistrate, Dunn gives us a portrait of an entire way of life.... Dunn also knows how to work a sentence. Without ever veering into historical fiction, she consistently succeeds in bringing what might otherwise seem dusty and remote to vivid life.... If there is much about Pliny's world that she makes seem familiar, then there is just as much that she makes seem very strange....The result is a portrait of the Roman Empire that gives the reader something of the shiver down the spine that Herculaneum can inspire: a sense that we are as close to the vanished world of two millennia ago as we are ever likely to get.--Literary Review (UK)
Enthusiastic and vividly drawn.... An appreciation of both men, with frequent digressions on the Elder's opinions on oysters and metal scripture, the Younger's poetical ambitions and villas along Lake Como, and the effect of their dual legacy on future eras.--Kathleen McCallister, Library Journal
If only Daisy Dunn's book had been around back when I was an aspiring classicist... Dunn is a good writer, with some of the easy erudition of Mary Beard, that great popularizer of Roman history, and her translations from both Plinys are graceful and precise. Ultimately her enthusiasm, together with her eye for the odd, surprising detail, wins you over.--Charles McGrath, New York Times Book Review
Only a writer as sure-footed as Ms. Dunn would even attempt such a challenge.... Her exploration of his life and times, and that of his uncle, has much to offer to readers, with its ground-up, kaleidoscopic view of a nine-decade span of Roman history.--James Romm, Wall Street Journal
The Shadow of Vesuvius is the definitive guide to Plinydom.--Franz Lidz "New York Times"
If you were writing a biography of Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus--or Pliny the Younger, the author of one of the most famous collections of letters surviving from the early Roman Empire--it would be hard not to start with the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius, on the Bay of Naples, in 79 A.D., for Pliny was the only writer to leave us an eyewitness account of the catastrophe. The English classicist Daisy Dunn... wisely does not resist the temptation... She succeed[s] in making Pliny [the Younger]...a poignant character, the kind of person who has to do the dirty jobs of an empire and, having done them, gets no compliments.... Neither Pliny knew that his homeland's great mountain, Vesuvius, was nourishing in her bosom the extermination of so many of her people. This somehow makes the two men's kinship closer.--Joan Acocella "The New Yorker"
A delightful biography, interweaving extracts from [Pliny the] Elder's Natural History with [Pliny the] Younger's letters, speeches, and poetry into an insightful portrait of the men, their world, and their influence on people such as Giorgio Vasari, Frances Bacon, and Percy and Mary Shelley.... This is a rich, entertaining dual biography of two fascinating men, a revealing portrait of ancient Rome, and a celebration of nature that will appeal to fans of Mary Beard.--Merle Jacob, Booklist [starred review]
The Roman Empire comes to life through the biographies of two influential men.... [Dunn] creates a vivid tapestry of the Roman world.... A sensitive, spirited investigation of the ancient world.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
[Sparks] impresses with her exceptional collection of wry, feminist stories.... Some stories smuggle incredible emotional impact into surprisingly few pages.... Sparks's sardonic wit never distracts from her polished dismantling of everyday and extraordinary abuses. Readers will love this remarkable, deliciously caustic collection.-- "Publishers Weekly"