William H. Race is Paddison Professor of Classics, Emeritus, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
[A] translation which is modern, accurate, streamlined, and
comprehensible… [which preserves], with a surprising degree of
success, a sense of Pindar’s artful word order… He may well have
produced the best text available… In many respects Race’s edition
of the fragments will be even more useful than Snell-Maehler… A
landmark contribution.
*Bryn Mawr Classical Review*
This excellent Loeb edition of Pindar supersedes the antiquated
volume edited by Sandys in 1915. Its most notable feature is
clarity: the Greek typeface is a pleasure to read; the translations
are crisp and accurate… plentiful notes both explain Pindar’s
recherché allusions and bring out how more than one interpretation
of the text is often possible… This edition will be of lasting
value.
*Classical Review*
Race succeeds admirably in furnishing the text and translation with
a concise and helpful introduction, thereby elucidating the social
and literary background of the poems that follow. Each poem is also
accompanied by a succinct introduction and summary. The
accompanying index and genealogies are invaluable study aids for
students of myth from the primary sources. Most importantly, Race
has achieved his aim of creating a readable translation which
follows the familiar Loeb format—a feat of considerable ingenuity
in the case of Pindar… Race devotes a significant portion of his
introduction to a crisp and detailed analysis of the epinikian
genre. Technical issues in Pindar’s composition of the Odes are
equally effectively dealt with… Undergraduates tackling the
complexities of this author for the first time will clearly find
this volume essential. The more mature devotee will also benefit,
thanks to the user-friendly scholarship of these volumes, from a
day or two at the races with Race.
*Joint Association of Classical Teachers Review*
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