Amo, Amas, Amat... and All That: How to Become a Latin Lover
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Average customer review:Product Description
Have you ever found yourself irritated when a sine qua non or
a mea culpa is thrown into the conversation by a particularly annoying
person? Or do distant memories of afternoons spent struggling to learn
obscure verbs fill you with dread?
Never fear! (or as a Latin show-off might say, Nil Desperandum!)
In this delightful guided tour of Latin, which features everything from a
Monty Python grammar lesson to David Beckham's tattoos and all the best
snippets of prose and poetry from 2000 years of literary history, Harry
Mount wipes the dust off those boring primers and breathes life back into
the greatest language of them all.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #67169 in Books
- Published on: 2006-11-02
- Original language: English, Latin
- Binding: Hardcover
- 269 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Those endless afternoons where you struggled to remember the third person singular present indicative of volo (vult) may be a long time ago. But, if you have the vaguest memory of the ablative absolute, the locative and the gerund, you mastery of Latin will spring back to life with Amo, amas, amat...and all that. In his trip through the world's most influential language, Harry Mount uncorks its magic, drawing on Latin lovers from Kingsley Amis to John Cleese, from Evelyn Waugh to Donna Tart. Read this book and you will know Latin. Know Latin and - mirabile dictu - you will know Wilfred Owen's misery, Catullus's aching heart and the comedy of a thousand bachelor schoolmasters.
About the Author
Harry Mount read Classics at Oxford and was a Latin tutor before becoming a journalist. He has been a leader-writer and New York correspondent at the Daily Telegraph. His memoir of his time as a barrister's pupil, My Brief Career, is also published by Short Books
Customer Reviews
Lamenting less Latin
An entertaining run through Latin as the language of the classics.
Could have said something about pronunciation: why make it up as the classicists do, or mangle it as the Etonians do, when you can experience it as the beautiful living language of the Church spoken in the Italian style.
A few copy-editing mistakes: translation of the Ave Maria and of Horace (p. 206 - leporem translated as dove rather than hare!).
But otherwise an inspiration to try again with the language of so many ages. Well done, Harry Mount. Who is going to do the same for Greek?
Confusing
While this book amounts on one level to a light-hearted but informative take on Latin, its learning and its relentless demise in British schools, the (rather angry) final chapter left me confused as to what the author was actually trying to do.
As might be expected from a person of Harry Mount's standing, there is much humour in this piece; indeed, at times, the jocular tone and somewhat self-conscious attempts to jemmy in a joke at all costs serve to interrupt the flow and can become a smidge irritating and make the author seem a little too pleased with himself.
However, the final chapter, with its rather spiteful attack on modern textbooks and methods, sits rather uneasily with the tone of the rest of the book and gives the impression, rightly or wrongly, that Mount's intention was rather more serious than he might originally have implied. All in all, a rather confusing conclusion to a book which is certainly well worth reading by anyone who remembers those dark times of learning Latin declensions and cases by rote.
OK, but "Annus Horribilis" is better
I wanted to enjoy this book more than I actually did. I've recently got "Annus Horribilis: Latin for Everyday Life" (by Mark Walker, published by Tempus) which I found more fun and informative.




