Douglas Boin is a professor of history at Saint Louis University and author of Coming Out Christian in the Roman World and two scholarly books on antiquity. He lives in Austin, Texas.
"Today, as Douglas Boin of Saint Louis University points out in his
superb book, the word "Gothic" has become synonymous with all that
is "dark, gloomy and macabre". History, it is often said, is
written by the winners—but that is only if they can write. If they
can't, then history is written by the losers, crossly."
*The Economist*
"...a finely crafted account of how Alaric became the embodiment of
Rome's self-defeating fear of the world outside its frontiers."
*Philip Parker - Literary Review*
"Few records survive of the Visigoth culprit Alaric (well, if you
will destroy a literate culture...) but the historian Douglas Boin
knows enough to clear up some misapprehensions. Alaric the Goth… is
a Latin-speaker who longs for nothing so much as to be Roman… One
snub too many, and he and his mob show the Eternal City to be
fleeting. The book… understands what drives personal success far
better than modern treatises on management and self-help… An
“Outsider’s History” is how Boin describes his book about Alaric.
History is seldom anyone else’s."
*Janan Ganesh - Financial Times*
"A new history argues the Goths who sacked Rome have been much
traduced."
*Patrick Kidd - The Times*
"He [Douglas Boin] eloquently protests against the stereotypical
depictions of Goths..."
*Catherine Conybeare - Times Literary Supplement*
"History may mostly be written by the victors, but the destruction
of Rome by the far less literate Goths in 410AD is an exception.
This colourful portrait of the city and empire in the fifth century
tells their side of the story. Rich Romans lived in splendour while
Goths endured slavery. Alaric, their leader, served in the Roman
army— before turning on the oppressors."
*The Best Books of the Year 2020: History - The Economist*
"Boin published his book before the attack on the US Capitol, but
his reading of the ancient past through the lens of contemporary
trauma offers a fitting epitaph to a regime that did not fall but
petered out – and a reminder that even a failed sack can be given
meaning."
*Josephine Quinn - London Review of Books*
"The most engaging parts of Alaric the Goth, and by far the greater
portion of its contents, diverge from Alaric’s story to give a
sweeping view of Roman life near the fall of the empire. It’s here,
especially in matters of Christian-pagan tension, that Mr. Boin
excels."
*James Romm - The Wall Street Journal*
"Boin paints a richly detailed portrait of the world in which
Alaric maneuvered, defined by the thrashings of an empire in
turmoil… A cogent, readable text that vividly conveys the fears and
confusion that surrounded the issue of immigrants’ rights in a
period of declining Roman power."
*Wendy Smith - The Boston Globe*
"This brilliant book... starts the story of the sack of Rome not
from inside the walls of the eternal city, but outside, with Alaric
the Goth. It’s a great trick, superbly executed. Some books tilt
the world so that you will never quite see it in the same way
again, and this is definitely one."
*Catherine Nixey, Summer Reads 2020 - History Extra*
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