What sort of books inspired you as a child?
For some reason Iāve always found the past more interesting than the future. As a child in the 1970s, I would read all kinds of history books but, looking back on it, they were incredibly narrowly focused ā kings and queens of England, the Second World War and the like. That was what kids were given then. It wasnāt until I was doing A levels that I realised that other people had histories too and I started reading accounts written by former slaves in America, such as Solomon Northupās Twelve Years a Slave.
Which books led you to devote your working life to the study of the ancient world?
Keith Hopkins was a brilliant lecturer and writer whose books Conquerors and Slaves and Death and Renewal first made me realise that there were different kinds of ancient history waiting to be written than the traditional accounts of great men and high politics. We didnāt get on at all personally, though, and it was Peter Garnsey and his books, such as Famine and Food Supply in the Graeco-Roman World, who actually taught me how to write āhistory from belowā.
Your new book explores āthe crimes of ancient Romeā. Which books, ancient and modern, would you recommend for offering vivid accounts of Roman criminality?
You canāt do better than start with Suetonius and his life of the notorious emperor Nero. Just remember to have a large pinch of salt handy while reading it. Or if you like fiction, try reading Apuleiusā Golden Ass, whose protagonist is transformed into an ass and captured by a group of bandits. They are about as real as Robin Hood and his band, but it is a great read. There is surprisingly little written about Roman crime that doesnāt concentrate on the legal aspects and is pretty dry as a result. Two very readable books which contextualise the laws are John Crookās Law and Life in Ancient Rome: 90 BC-AD 212 and Jill Harriesā Law and Crime in the Roman World.
Where can one find good accounts of the heritage of the Romans?
Peter Jones has written a number of really good popular books on the ancient world. I particularly liked Quid pro Quo: What the Romans Really Gave the English Language, which looks at the Latin words that have come into English and how differently the Romans themselves used them. I like booksĀ that are also critical about the ways that the ancient heritage has been used in the modern world. Mary Beard and John Hendersonās Classics: A Very Short Introduction does that excellently.
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What is the last book you gave as a gift, and to whom?
I gave a student a copy of BronisÅaw Malinowskiās Magic, Science and Religion. Itās a bit dated now, but he first used fieldwork to understand the people of the Trobriand Islands from their own point of view, and in many ways this encapsulates what cultural historians are trying to do.
What books do you have on your desk waiting to be read?
My wife works on English literature and is always urging me to read Dickens, but Iām a lost cause when it comes to novels: āFull up years agoā, as Bertie Wooster used to say. Iām researching a book to be titled Risk in the Roman World and so my desk has a mound of volumes with grim titles such as Theories of Risk.
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Jerry Toner is fellow in Classics at Churchill College, Cambridge. His latest book is Infamy: The Crimes of Ancient Rome (Profile).
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