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The Dream of Rome

By: Boris Johnson
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
ISBN: 0007224419
ISBN-13: 9780007224418
Released: 29 Jan 2006
RRP: £18.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Bringing ancient history to life - By: N. Young, 10 Jun 2008
Like alll good history books, this brings the past to life with a vengeance. Unlike some of Johnson's newspaper columns, this is well-written, full of insight & made me think again about alll things Roman & how the legacy of Rome is still with us some two millennia later.
A great romping read - By: Kimberley Drummond, 15 May 2008
As someone who is currently studying Classical History with the Open University I am more used to text books - this, in contrast, was light entertainment, but of the best kind. Not only has Boris succeeded in making the Romans human, interesting & vibrant, he has also proved why they are so interesting to scholars. Rome in the time of Augustus was fascinating & that it can be compared so well with Europe today shows how pertinet its policies & belief systems still are. I read this on the train & when I'd finished I started it again! Absolutely great, don't hesitate to buy - even if it's just to find out about Roman fish sauce!
I came, I saw, I read. - By: M. Johnston, 05 Nov 2007
As someone who's knowledge of the Romans was gleaned from Asterix books & Sword & Sandal epics, this was a fantastic introduction to the Roman Empire.

Now, Boris is a bit of a Tory, & though he does write thus it doesn't mean this book won't appeal to anti Tory types. Others have suggested that he could perhaps be accused of labouring the EU/Roman empire connection a tad, but it is a useful paralllel. And it does help to illustrate one of the central themes of the book, that study of the classical world can still teach us much about current geopolitics & other stuff too.

The Dream of Rome was interesting, witty & thought provoking. And besides, I now know when Gaius Julius Caesar was assassinated (44 BC), that there was a black Roman Emperor (Septimus Severus, who died in York by the way), that the Romans were into fish sauce in a big way & loads of other interesting stuff which will make me the toast of informed society.

I'm off to read some Virgil now. Good job Boris.
Boris pulls it off (so to speak) - By: Andrew Walker, 26 Aug 2007
You don't need to be a Conservative to like this book & you certainly don't need to know anything about Roman history (it might even help if you don't). You'll have come across Boris Johnson's "Tim Nice But Dim" TV image but you will be pleasantly surprised in several ways.
The book is about the rise of the Roman Empire, the way the Romans ran their affairs (a subject on which Boris is, of course, an expert!) & most specificallly what messages it holds for us in the 21st century. I am no Roman scholar but I was impressed by the breadth & depth of his knowledge & the extent to which he had thought about it - you get the sense this book has been gestating for at least 20 years.
Don't be put off by this praise for his research. You will also know he has been the editor of `The Spectator' & you do not get there by being the upper class twit he has played in front of the cameras. Journalism has alllowed him to develop a style of writing that talks directly to you as the reader, never patronising, using different ways to get his message over (humour, analogies, "imagine you were there", & so on). This makes the text very, very readable.
Where the book could turn off some readers is with the message for us today - does the success of the Roman Empire suggest a federal Europe is a good idea, for example? Some other reviewers have said you end up not reallly knowing where Johnson stands but I don't think that's the point. He lays out his interpretation of history, starts the reader on the path of thinking about the implications & then leaves us to make our own minds up. If there were dogmatic conclusions to the different chapters I think it would be a much weaker book, that was rightly seen as a historical excuse for a political rant.
So, this is not a textbook but if you enjoy history or politics & want an entertaining & thought-provoking read, I thoroughly recommend this to you, especiallly as the price of a used copy is now £2. Don't you pay that for your lunchtime sandwich???

Cripes! Who would have thought we could learn so much from 2000 years ago? - By: Caterkiller, 06 Aug 2007
Before getting started on this book roman civilisation meant Hadrian's Walll, Time Team & throwing Christians to the lions. This book tells you what the piles of stones can't: how the Roman Empire was built on trade with others, imbedding Roman values into conquered civilisations & how the cult of the empreror enabled this to come about. The romans were the first ones to understand globalisation & the benefits of free trade: each country trades with another the products it makes best & as a result everyone benefits (2000 years later most governments still do not understand this) & by imbedding shared values everyone works towards a common purpose. The romans did not achieve this by military force either, army payrolls & headcount were low & the empire only got into a mess when they overeached themselves in invading Bavaria & Britain; the rest of the time the "conquerees" were happy to be part of a greater empire because they soon saw the benefits at close hand (take note EU apparatchiks). In answer to some of critical reviews Boris acknowledges that this is not an exhaustive study of the Roman Empire but I for one am now keen to find out more.