Popular in its day both as a sourcebook for writers and orators and as a
guidebook for living a moral life, this remarkably rich document serves
as an engaging introduction to the cultural and moral history of ancient
Rome. Valerius' "thousand tales" are arranged thematically in ninety-one
chapters that cover nearly every aspect of life in the ancient world,
including such wide-ranging topics as military discipline, child
rearing, and women lawyers. As a whole, the work gives the reader
fascinating insights into what it felt like to be an ancient Roman, what
the ancient Romans really believed, what their private world was like,
how they related to one another, and what they did when nobody was
watching.