Reviews
Lattimore's treatment is skillfully adapted to the needs of a partly non-classical audience, and will suit a wide reading public... [His] thoughts on the plays are illuminating, and all are stated with a freshness and vigor which make a readable and stimulating book.
This is close, illuminating, deliberately modest criticism that lights up passage after passage of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides.
Despite the intervening 45 years these essays have something refreshing to offer—that is, an opportunity to read what an accomplished poet makes of Greek tragedies as poetry.