Joseph B. Solodow
Author of Latin Alive: The Survival of Latin in English and the Romance Languages
About the Author
Joseph B. Solodow is Professor of Foreign Languages at Southern Connecticut State University and Lecturer in Classics at Yale University. He is the author of The Latin Particle Quidem and The World of Ovid's "Metmorphoses," and received the Modern Language Association's Scaglione Translation Prize show more for his rendering of G. B. Conte's history of Latin literature into English, Latin Literature: A History. show less
Image credit: Yale University
Works by Joseph B. Solodow
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Latin gets a bad reputation for being a boring language long past its expiration date, but one of the things many people forget to remember is that English owes a lot of its existence to Latin. Joseph Sodolow’s Latin Alive is a look at the history, grammar, usage, and repurcussions that the Latin language brings to bear on the present. Sodolow does very well to show how Latin wasn’t just a language, but rather a way of life for most of Europe. Latin is a dense language but only so far at show more it was meant to be compact; each word, and even each inflection of word, imparts some meaning to the whole. Nope, no filler here.
To be sure, Sodolow’s text tries to be first a textbook and then a treatise on Roman history, but the two get intertwined many times. A beginner in Latin may indeed pick up a few new things here and veterans can get a little more from the historical asides. This book shows how Latin works in everyday prose, in written poetry, and even how it absorbed tricks from other languages over the years (much like English and many other languages). For a language book, this one actually clipped along rather well. The author’s intent is not to shove memorization tables down the reader’s throat, but to give the language a context for natural discussion and dissection. If you’re looking to learn Latin, you could do a lot worse than this one. show less
To be sure, Sodolow’s text tries to be first a textbook and then a treatise on Roman history, but the two get intertwined many times. A beginner in Latin may indeed pick up a few new things here and veterans can get a little more from the historical asides. This book shows how Latin works in everyday prose, in written poetry, and even how it absorbed tricks from other languages over the years (much like English and many other languages). For a language book, this one actually clipped along rather well. The author’s intent is not to shove memorization tables down the reader’s throat, but to give the language a context for natural discussion and dissection. If you’re looking to learn Latin, you could do a lot worse than this one. show less
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