emperorblackdoom wrote:
Caligula_K wrote:
emperorblackdoom wrote:
Caligula_K wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
Caligula_K wrote:
Nabokov- Lolita

Loved it when it's good but it's longer than it should be at times. Still one of the best ever.
Yep, such incredible prose, and so hilarious in a really twisted and creepy way. I loved it, but I still think Pale Fire is the better Nabokov.
K.J. Holkeskamp- Reconstructing the Roman Republic
Ah, good place for me to ask this question, Brahm. Does Holkeskamp go into much detail about the late 150s-early 140s BC period? I'm co-designing another Roman-based role-playing game and I'm going to need more background info on a seemingly darkly lit period of its history.
It's not a narrative and very much a theoretical book about overall Roman Republican political culture, so I don't think it would be a good book for you. What sort of background info do you need? You've hit upon the problem that you've chosen two decades for which we have very little information. For primary sources, you can check out the fragments of Polybius, which go to 146 BC, and then Plutarch's Lives might also be helpful (check out the Life of Aemilius Paullus, although he died in 160, Cato the Elder, and Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus). Some of Cato the Elder's writings may also be helpful. In terms of a modern work... Well, tell me the sort of information you're looking for and hopefully I'll be able to help you.
I'm basically looking for anything on the grumbling of the increasingly exploited small farmers/enrichment of the elite. I'd like to be able to show convincingly the antecedents of the Gracchi. This period was kinda purposely selected for its darkness because it wouldn't be constrained in an RPG setting (we are wrapping a post-Gracchi game and explaining why there i
sn't a Marius has become increasingly difficult, even in our alternate history setting). I'll be sure to check out Polybius, thanks. And heck, I have the Plutarch lives, so I have a leg up as it is.
Hmm, so this is a bit difficult, but I've tried to think up some stuff. You can start off by also checking out the beginning of Book 1 of Appian's Civil Wars and parts of Sallust's Jugurthine War. In terms of modern works... A good overall narrative of the period is Scullard's From the Gracchi to Nero, which will present the traditional viewpoint and some of the history before the Gracchi. However, there are some good (though dry) articles and books by a scholar named Nathan Rosenstein who has challenged a lot of the traditional viewpoints. Works to check out would be the book "Rome at War: Farms, Families and Death in the Middle Republic" and the article "Aristocrats and Agriculture in the Middle and Late Republic." Hope that helps.
Just finished Apollonius of Rhodes' Argonautica, now reading:
Diarmaid MacCulloch- Reformation: Europe's Divided House