List of Maps and Images
A Note on Sources
Introduction
Chapter 1: Setting the Stage
Chapter 2: The Greek States at War and Peace
Chapter 3: Sparta Provoked, Athens Intransigent
Chapter 4: The War Begins
Chapter 5: The Plague of War
Chapter 6: New Challenges and New Leaders
Chapter 7: The Fortunes of War
Chapter 8: War Throughout the Mainland, and the Call of the
West
Chapter 9: Moving Towards Peace
Chapter 10: The Peace that Was Not Peace
Chapter 11: An Invitation and Two Scandals
Chapter 12: Deliverance for Syracuse
Chapter 13: The Empire Strikes Back
Chapter 14: Dramatic Developments for the Athenians
Chapter 15: Alcibiades, Cyrus, and Lysander
Chapter 16: A Seeming Victory
Chapter 17: Athens After the Amnesty
Chapter 18: The Greek States in a Changing World
Chapter 19: Continuing Warfare in an Age of Reflection
Chapter 20: The End for Sparta
Chapter 21: War Without Victory
Cast of Characters
Bibliography
Jennifer T. Roberts is Professor of Classics and History at the City College of New York and the City University of New York Graduate Center. She is the author of Athens on Trial: The Anti-Democratic Tradition in Western Thought and Herodotus: A Very Short Introduction, and editor (with Walter Blanco) of the Norton Critical Editions of Herodotus' The Histories and Thucydides' The Peloponnesian War.
"A narrative that is readable and worth reading for Greek history
novice and junkie alike. The affordable paperback, furthermore, is
suitable for undergraduate classroom use. Roberts is an engaging
and entertaining story-teller with a sense of humor." -- Classical
Journal-Online
"She illuminates every complex situation, having the essential but
often obscure details at her fingertips; she uses her sources as
old friends, responsibly but critically.... You are in good hands
with Roberts; this is a sad tale, excellently told." -- The
Heythrop Journal
"A welcome contrast from traditional studies of the war ...
Impressive" -- Journal of Hellenic Studies
"Roberts presents the reader with a clear, straightforward and
chronological narrative of events from the background to and
origins of the war through to its grim conclusion and inconclusive
war-torn aftermath... this is a good read and a good overview of
the events that shaped the Classical Age. The events it describes
will long continue to invite debate." -- Mathew Trundle, H Soz
Kult
"This work is based on impressive scholarship. Roberts maintains a
smooth, highly readable narrative flow. In addition to a careful
analysis of Thucydides, the author interweaves discussions of
fifth- and fourth-century drama, philosophy, architecture, and art.
... Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries." --A. J.
Papalas, CHOICE
"An impressively informed and informative work of exceptionally
detailed and documented scholarship, "The Plague of War: Athens,
Sparta, and the Struggle fro Ancient Greece" reads from beginning
to end with an inherently engaging narrative that reads with the
smoothness of a well tuned novel. While very highly recommended for
both community and academic library World History collections in
general, and Hellenic History supplemental studies reading lists
in
particular, it should be noted for the personal reading lists of
students and non-specialist general readres with an interest in the
subject that "The Plague of War" is also available in a digital
book
format (Kindle, $14.39)." --Margaret Lane, The Midwest Book
Review
"[Roberts's] in-depth knowledge of the period's players, locations,
and events are all woven expertly into the narrative, providing the
reader with a broad, expansive view of the war and its consequences
for Greek culture and the future of Western civilization."
-Military Heritage
"Jennifer Roberts brings her accustomed cool expertise to bear on
this hottest of hot topics: not just any old war, but one that in
ancient Greek terms counted as a world war and, like those of the
last century, produced almost equally as ghastly and irredeemably
nasty consequences. Worst of all, in some ways, this was in her
concluding epitaph 'War Without Victory'." --Paul Cartledge, author
of Democracy: A Life
"In this riveting narrative, Jennifer Roberts breaks new ground
with a full-length portrait of the classical Greek world as viewed
through a dramatic account of the Peloponnesian War. Roberts
breathes new life into the familiar succession of campaigns and
battles through the scope of her vision, which gives equal
attention to the war's many impacts on the home-front in both
Athens and Sparta. In The Plague of War, we see how social
upheavals, economic
crises, family life, and even philosophy and drama were drawn
inexorably into the war-zone." --John R. Hale, author of Lords of
the Sea
"Jennifer Roberts recreates the agony of Athens and Sparta with a
deft hand and a knowing eye. She tells the story of the war that
ruined Greece in all its power and pathos. This is a learned,
sympathetic and readable account." --Barry Strauss, author of The
Death of Caesar
"This book is exceedingly comprehensive for a book written for a
general audience. It is highly readable and quite interesting; the
smooth descriptions and detailed portraits of the key statesmen are
particularly engaging." - San Francisco Book Review
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