Introduction
1: Coming of Age in Civil War
2: Making a Name for Themselves
3: Political Ambitions
4: The Conspiracy of Catiline
5: Showdown in the Forum
6: Divorce, Marry, Repeat
7: With Cato in Prison
8: Cato's Triumph
9: Gaul
10: Cato's Medicines
11: Civil War!
12:
Josiah Osgood is Professor of Classics at Georgetown University, and holds a PhD from Yale University. A winner of the Rome Prize, he is the author of five books on Roman history and the translator and editor of How to Be A Bad Emperor, a 2020 edition of Suetonius's Lives of the Caesars.
Josiah Osgood makes a valiant attempt not to choose sides between
Caesar and Cato.
*Joseph Epstein, Washington Free Beacon*
An accessible, vivid and engaging account of Rome's seemingly
inevitable descent into civil war... As well as being an
entertaining read, Uncommon Wrath is a timely and thought-provoking
one.
*Jane Draycott, BBC History Magazine*
The story that Osgood tells so clearly, learnedly, and engagingly
does indeed illuminate the lasting costs of polarised conflict.
*Rowan Williams, New Statesman*
vividly told history ... [a] wide-ranging book
*Armand D'Angour, Engeslberg Ideas*
A highly readable book about ancient republican Rome... It is also
a timely story - a kind of case study of political meltdown that is
relevant given the heat in politics today, particularly in the
US.
*Popular History Books*
This well-written book, underpinned by profound erudition, deserves
the widest readership
*Harry Sidebottom, Sunday Telegraph*
Osgood writes with great clarity... It takes skill to bring the
reader as close to the complex events of the Late Republic as
this... It is a sign of a good book when the ending comes as a
pulse-quickening surprise - even to those who already know what is
coming.
*Daisy Dunn, The Critic*
lively and insightful
*Adrian Goldsworthy, The New Criterion*
...fast-paced, well-written and authoritative narrative
*David Stuttard, Classics for All*
An incisive and accessible dual biography of Julius Caesar and Cato
the Younger focused on their shared responsibility for the Roman
Republic's downfall... Along the way, Osgood issues incisive
warnings about the dangers of polarization that resonate with
today's political landscape and vividly describes the era's
religious rituals, military battles, and Senate debates... He
builds a persuasive and entertaining case. Roman history buffs will
be intrigued.
*Publishers Weekly*
The respective sagas of Cato and Caesar, always timely, seem even
more so in today's America. Osgood's interwoven retelling of their
raucous and violent careers, and their impact on a tottering
republic, makes for compelling reading.
*Steven Saylor, author of Dominus: A Novel of the Roman Empire*
A brilliant dual biography of Caesar and Cato: two titanic
personalities whose fame illumined the death throes of the Roman
Republic, and continues to blaze to this day.
*Tom Holland, author of Rubicon: The Last Years of the Roman
Republic*
Lively, literate, and readable, Uncommon Wrath is all that you
could want in a book on one of the most destructive feuds in
history. As Osgood recounts, Cato and Caesar's refusal to
compromise did much to destabilize the Roman Republic. Informed by
scholarship and executed with grace.
*Barry Strauss, author of The War that Made the Roman Empire:
Antony, Cleopatra, and Octavian at Actium*
A gripping account of the rivalry between Julius Caesar and Cato,
two men at the heart of the political dysfunction that brought down
Rome's Republic. This is the rare book that warns us about the
dangers of the modern political moment while offering a nuanced and
insightful analysis of the character of some of Rome's most famous
leaders.
*Edwards Watts, author of Mortal Republic: How Rome Fell into
Tyranny*
Uncommon Wrath is a riveting re-telling of the violent end of the
Roman Republic. By restoring Cato to the center of the story,
Osgood reminds us that this symbol of old-fashioned virtue was not
just a myth, but a leader nearly as crafty as his hated rival. Here
is a vivid and human-scale account, whose focus on partisanship and
political rivalry makes for a resonant and all-too-timely
reflection.
*Kyle Harper, author of The Fate of Rome: Climate, Disease, and the
End of an Empire*
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