[An] excellent biography. . . . Goldsworthy tells this story with great skill and narrative force . . . [he] provides a great deal of vivid detail.-Mark Miller,
Wall Street JournalAn authoritative and exciting portrait not only of Caesar but of the complex society in which he lived.-Steven Coates,
New York Times Book ReviewA rich and remarkably complete panorama of the times and the man. . . . The best introduction to Caesar and his world that is currently available.-Karl Galinsky,
BookforumThis book makes and insightfully explains the leap from Caesar the soldier and general to Caesar the statesman and nation builder. It's better than any book I've ever read on him, and more incisive.-
Wall Street Journal (cited by Leo J. Hindery Jr., CEO of InterMedia Partners VII LLP, as recommended reading of biographies and autobiographies of great leaders for those plotting a career path to the corner office)
The man who virtually defined the West's concept of leadership comes alive in this splendid biography. Military historian Goldsworthy gives a comprehensive, vigorous account of Caesar's conquest of Gaul and his victories in the civil war that made him master of Rome. But he doesn't stint on the nonmartial aspects of Caesar's life-his dandyism, his flagrant womanizing (which didn't stop enemies from gay-baiting him), his supple political genius and the flair for drama and showmanship that cowed mutinous legionaries and courted Rome's restive masses. Goldsworthy's is a sympathetic profile. . . . More compellingly than most biographies, Goldsworthy's exhaustive, lucid, elegantly written life makes its subject the embodiment of his age.-
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
This is an engaging and well-drawn resource for those who wish to be introduced to the man who was Caesar. . . . Additions to Goldsworthy's text include a chronology of key events, a glossary, and notes. Recommended for academic and larger public libraries.-
Library Journal[A] definitive and entertaining new biography. . . . Goldsworthy is renowned as a military historian, but his coverage here of messy late Republican politics is also authoritative and crystal clear. He gives us a colourful sense of the wider world and Roman society at this time, and above all, the commanding, unmistakable presence of the timelessly fascinating man himself.-Christopher Hart,
IndependentThe analysis of Caesar's generalship is predictably excellent, the account of the Gallic wars, in particular, has rarely been bettered.-Tom Holland, The Spectator
Named one of the 100 noteworthy books of the year (2006) by the Kansas City Star
Chosen as an Outstanding title in the 2007 Association of American University Presses (AAUP) University Press Books for Public and Secondary School Libraries
Winner of the 2007 Society for Military History Distinguished Book Award in the biography and memoirs category
Named a Number 1 Editor's Choice in Biography by amazon in 2006
Named a Best Book of 2006 by Amazon.com
It gives me great pleasure to give Caesar the strongest possible recommendation. Caesar was a complex character living in confusing times, but Adrian Goldsworthy tackles the subject with a vigor, thoroughness and clarity of purpose that the great man himself would have approved of.-Philip Sidnell, Editor, Ancient and Medieval History Book Club (London)
Goldsworthy's book will remain the definitive biography of Caesar for years to come.-Philip Matyszak, author of The Sons of Caesar: Imperial Rome's First Dynasty
Adrian Goldsworthy is one of our most promising young military historians today.-Sir John Keegan, author of The Iraq War
Adrian Goldsworthy is one of the new generation of young classicists who combine scholarship with storytelling to bring the ancient world to life. In his masterly new Caesar, he shows us the greatest Roman as man, statesman, soldier, and lover.-Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar
Caesar is an accessible, balanced, and highly readable contribution to our understanding of one of Rome's most complex characters. No one writing in English today knows more about Roman military history than Adrian Goldsworthy.-Guy MacLean Rogers, author of Alexander: The Ambiguity of Greatness