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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Cicero", sorted by average review score:

Secrets of a Golden Dawn Temple: The Alchemy and Crafting of Magickal Implements (Llewellyn's Golden Dawn Series)
Published in Paperback by Llewellyn Publications (April, 1999)
Authors: Chic Cicero and Sandra Tabatha Cicero
Average review score:

A Personal Work
Chic and Tabatha Cicero have given the occult world quite a present with this text, as it is informative, insightful and a glimpse at some of their own personal work. The "meat and potatoes" of this book, if you will, is as it says the creation of ritual implements. Within is contained a step-by-step guide which starts with finding the materials and ends with consecrating the tool. The tome is further supported with several color images of some of the author's very own creations. The aspiring Hermetic Magus would do well to purchase a copy of this book as even those inept at wood-carving would be able to follow its easy instructions. Kudos to the Cicero's for this excellent piece of work.

A must-have if you follow the Golden Dawn magical tradition
The path of western Hermetic magic is a path full of symbolism and a staggering amount of paraphernalia that has the intention of sending symbolic messages to the mind of the practitioner, a western mind that usually craves for lots of information in the form of colour, shapes, aromas... This wonderful book gives detailed instructions on building all of the implements of the elemental grades, the Portal grade, the Adeptus Minor grade, and also how to furnish your Outer Order Temple, a Crypt of the Adepts and the Adept's personal Temple. Not only does it give detailed and easy-to-follow instructions on building these implements, but includes explanations on the instrument's symbolism, and profound meditations to help you get attunded with the instrument's power and meaning. At the end of the book, several non-traditional, but useful instruments are included. I have made several of these myself, and can assure you they work very well. If you follow the Golden Dawn magical tradition either in a group or by yourself, you should have this book. Even more if by chance of destiny you have become the elder or leader or founder of a Ceremonial Hermetic Magical group, and you steer quite an amount of your magical peers' education, training, and inner work.

Next best thing to the temple
This thick and oversized volume eplains crafting and rituals, necessary information for the formation of a temple. Most of it over my head. An inset with color pictures of tablets and tools, a description of the appropriate energies associated and especially the description of the vault of the adeptii taken straight from the "The Golden Dawn" written by the late Mr. Israel Regardie. This book unlocks secrets for "outer" students and explains all those tools pictured in the tarot. Some rituals ar4e given to help understand the pack. Gives you a real grasp of the things required for the basic entry into the temple and also new directions to further your studies or a brief look at things that just aren't for you.


Cicero
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (January, 1925)
Authors: Marcus T. Cicero and N. H. Watts
Average review score:

An Analysis of Ancient Advocacy
This is a review of "De Oratore" books I-II and "De Oratore" book III in the Loeb Classical Library.

Marcus Tullius Cicero may not have been the greatest trial lawyer of ancient Rome, but he is the best remembered. He wrote much on many subjects, and some of his private correspondence also survives. He did his best writing in the field of rhetoric. Although he was not an original thinker on the subject of rhetoric, "De Oratore" shows him to have had an encyclopedic practical knowledge of oratory in general and criminal trial advocacy in particular.

Cicero wrote "De Oratore" as a dialog among some of the preeminent orators of the era immediately preceding Cicero's time. The occasion is a holiday at a country villa, and the characters discuss all facets of oratory, ceremonial, judicial, and deliberative. They devote most of the discussion to judicial oratory, and their discussion reveals the trial of a Roman lawsuit to be somewhat analogous to the trial of a modern lawsuit. You have to piece it together from stray references to procedure scattered throughout the work, but it appears that a Roman trial consisted of opening statements, the taking of evidence, and final arguments. Modern trial advocacy manuals devote most of their attention to the taking of evidence, but Cicero dismisses the mechanics of presenting evidence as relatively unimportant compared to the mechanics of presenting argument.

"De Oratore" is divided into three books. The first speaks of the qualities of the orator; the second of judicial oratory, and the third of ceremonial and deliberative oratory. The modern trial lawyer would find the second book most interesting and most enlightening. A lot about trial advocacy has changed since Cicero's day (e.g. no more testimony taken under torture), but a lot hasn't.. Much of what Cicero says holds true even in the modern courtroom.

Trial lawyers cannot congregate without swapping "war stories," and Cicero's characters are no exception. They pepper their discussion with references to courtroom incidents which have such verisimilitude that they could have happened last week instead of 2,000 years ago. I have no doubt that Cicero, had he lived today, would have made a formidable trial lawyer.

The Loeb Classical Library edition of "De Oratore" consists of two volumes. Volume one contains Books I and II of "De Oratore," and volume two contains Book III along with two shorter philosphical works and "De Partitione Oratoria." "De Partitione" purports to be a discussion between Cicero and his son on oratory. "De Partitione" differs so much from "De Oratore," that many (myself included) doubt Cicero wrote it.

Trial Techniques for the Ancient Attorney
When I was in law school at the University of Florida back in the 70's, our student bar association raised money by selling "looms" on the law courses. Looms were the typed up notes of the students who made the highest grades in each of the classes. Looms were clear, concise statements of the essentials of a course without all the extraneous verbiage that creeps into didactic presentation.

"Rhetorica ad Herennium" reads like a loom. It states its points in clear, concise language without elaboration. The points are well made and highly relevant to the subject of persuasive oratory.

You might well describe "Rhetorica" as an ancient handbook on the subject of arguing a criminal case to a jury. At some trial advocacy school I attended sometime during my career as a lawyer, I learned a basic outline for delivering a final argument. You can imagine my amusement when I learned that this basic outline came from a 2,000 year old book. That isn't the only part of the book applicable to the modern courtroom.

The ancient rhetorician was to be skilled in five areas: 1. Invention: Deciding what to say. 2. Arrangment: Deciding what order to say it in. 3. Style: Saying it well. 4. Memory: Remembering what to say. 5. Delivery: The nonverbals that accompany speech.

"Rhetorica" consists of four books arranged as follows:

Books I & II cover Invention, especially as it relates to Judicial or Forensic Rhetoric, giving an analysis as timely as an article from last week's law journal. Although the technology of rhetoric has changed markedly since the days of Cicero, the general principles of rhetoric haven't changed much at all.

Book III takes up Ceremonial and Deliberative Rhetoric and also deals with Arrangement, Delivery, and Memory.

Book IV, which proves the most tedious, deals with Style.

Rhetoric for Dummies
I think this is one of the best books on public speaking I have ever read. It is clear and concise. The author lays out what you are to know and do very well. I would recommend Ad Herennium to anyone. I am really glad my 10th grade Rhetoric teacher made me read this!!!


The Eyespell Experiment: Eyespell, Earth, and the Emergence of Mystic Management
Published in Paperback by iUniverse.com (May, 2001)
Author: John P. Cicero
Average review score:

Fiction or Fact
One of the more interesting things about The Eyespell Experiment is its combination of fiction and fact. While the principles of Mystic Management can certainly be considered fact, the planet Eyespell is fiction. The story moves between Eyespell and Earth as the two planets struggle to achieve a "safe" place in the universe. There is the fantastic imagery (I think it would make a great movie). Oh yes, and if you catch the forward, the author alludes to the blending of fiction and fact with regard to the story itself. What the author considered fiction was written as fact by another writer. The book touches the collective unconscious or conscious as the case may be and is definitely worth the read - especially if you are looking for a new management approach.

Excelllent Book!
The author did a fantastic job of bringing two story lines together wihout leaving the reader with questions. The imagery was fantastic and the flowing text made it nearly impossible to put down the book. Excellent for pleasure or business reading and gives hope to a whole society!


M. Tulli Ciceronis Pro M. Caelio Oratio
Published in Paperback by Clarendon Pr (June, 1988)
Authors: Marcus Tullius Cicero and R. G. Austin
Average review score:

hic liber legendus est.
This is a great book! I have been using it all semester in my 300-level Latin course, and I cannot emphasize enough how helpful I have found it. Austin's is considered the preeminent commentary on the Pro Caelio among the faculty at my school, and I would venture to guess that the same applies just about anywhere else. The Pro Caelio is a speech which was delivered by the famed Roman orator, Marcus Tullius Cicero, in defense of Marcus Caelius, a personal friend accused of attempted murder. This text is not a translation and is not intended for reading by those without a grounding in the fundamentals of Latin grammar and syntax. In this edition of the Pro Caelio, the author provides alternate readings of the Latin text in footnotes at the bottom of each page. (Disparities between the medieval codices by which this work was passed down to us are common). He assigns each codex a Greek letter at the beginning of the book which serves to identify, in abbreviated form, the text which the alternate reading is ascribed to. This makes finding alternate readings -- and thus starting arguments over the meaning of a passage -- quite easy. Also provided, in endnotes which follow an unbroken presentation of the Latin text, are Austin's personal commentaries on certain passages. These range from very short to sometimes two pages in length, depending on the passage's importance and perceived difficulty. These notes provide a glimpse into the history behind the dramatic trial. I would recommend this book to any Classics scholar, beginning or advanced. For once, one of my course books will find a permanent home on my bookshelf instead of at the used bookstore after finals week!

Legendus est!
This book is the culmination of years of dedicated Oxford scholarship which has resulted in a masterful commentary on Cicero's Pro Caelio. I just started using this text in my advanced Latin class, and have found it far superior to even the exceptional Ciraolo text I used previously. The print is small, and the glosses and comments are placed in endnotes instead of footnotes, which makes the whole thing rather cumbersome. But oh, what marvelous information is to be found in those notes! Austin cites every major authority (up to 1959) on even the minutest of details and pits conflicting theories against each other, and then adds his own frequently curt pronouncements on the subject -- but always leaves the reader to make up his own mind. He makes certain to note where the various medieval codices diverge, even if there is only a scintilla of difference in the phrasings of a passage. This again shows his dedication to scholarship and letting the reader make up his own mind. This is THE definitive commentary on the Pro Caelio, for this is the place where you will find all the great Classicists of the ages gathered for one great symposium; it is the gateway to all the more specialized scholarship and a great general overview of them all.


Neighborhood
Published in Hardcover by Ellis Press (May, 1994)
Author: Norbert Blei
Average review score:

Capture's the true feeling of "old Chicago" neighborhoods
This book captures the reality of living in Berwyn and Cicero and celebrates the lives of the working-class members of society sometimes so easily overlooked and forgotten. It also explains why these individuals wanted to keep their small, close-knit communities from becoming like the old "changing" neighborhoods in the city of Chicago (which many of them fled). A tribute to the real "working class." It's a must for anyone who wants to delve into the lives of the butcher, baker and other entrepreneurs of a very special era in America's history. It will give you a much deeper appreciation of their struggles and fight to preserve what they built and loved.

Nostagic trip back to the old neighborhood
Grew up in Cicero in the late 40's and early 50's. This will bring back many memories for you. Writing style is very smooth. You feel the author is just carrying on a converstion with you.


On Government (Penguin Classics)
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (March, 1994)
Authors: Michael Grant and Marcus Tullius Cicero
Average review score:

Superb, superb, superb!!!
This book truly shows the art of a great speaker and orator. Cicero is the best!. "On government" truly develops the mind. (The book is also handy if you want to expand your vocabulary.)

LOVER OF THE CLASSICS
Cicero is the greatest of latin writers. His knowledge is so wide. This book brings together many of his thoughts on government.This book makes it obvious how much he loved the republican form of government. Our founding fathers were widely read on Cicero's treatise's and rightly so. Excellent reading.


Cicero Letters to Atticus
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Univ Pr (June, 1985)
Authors: Marcus Tullius Cicero and E. O. Winstedt
Average review score:

very recommendable book
If you are interested in the classical world, you should read Ciceronis epistulae in Latine. And do not read them in English-translation. Not to choose an easier way.


Cicero on Oratory and Orators (Landmarks in Rhetoric and Public Address)
Published in Paperback by Southern Illinois Univ Pr (Trd) (December, 1986)
Authors: Marcus Tullius Cicero and J.S. Watson
Average review score:

Quite a mouthful!!!!
This is considered by many to be Cicero's magnum-opus of his career. Whether it is or not is a topic of debate. What is outside the jurisdiction of debate is that it is a landmark work in the history of oratory.

In it Cicero details the various oratorical techniques which should be employed by the master of elocution. Such topics as eloquence, delivery, word choice and accessability of diction are discussed. Each view and counterview is presented by a different interlocutor, in the Platonic tradition. We even have none other than Julius Caesar lecturing on what Nietzsche would call the "uses and disadvantages" of invoking humor during serious orations. One of the primary issues which comes under consideration is the level of erudition of the orator. Should the individual be well versed in sundry fields of intellectual endeavor (such as the philosopher, perhaps?)? Does the ability to invoke virtually any academic pursuit aid in getting one's point across? Or, does this only lead to a person with an overly and unnecessary pedantic approach to oratory - one which stocklists various irrelevant points to the topic at hand? If so, is it better for the speechmaker to be less well rounded in his studies, and instead focused solely on the subject matter of his parlance? Cicero takes the question up at great lengths.

Within the dialogue myriad allusions are made to such household names as Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Pericles, Isocrates, Democritus, Hesiod, Demosthenes, Cato the elder, Anaxagoras, Valerius and Scipio Africanus, as well as a multitude of less well known names which would be recognized only by the most learned classical scholars. A general knowledge of Greaco-Roman history up until the time of Cicero is highly recommended before engaging this text.

The second part of the book is entitled "Brutus; or Remarks on Eminent Orators." This is supposedly taken from a conversation which Cicero actually had with Brutus and a few other mutual friends, in Cicero's own words "in a private lawn, near a statue of Plato" (p. 268). In it Cicero extols the great Roman orators of the past and (as in "Orators") extends his criticism against the sophists. He also pays homage to his own teacher: Molo of Rhodes. One comes away with nothing less than an awe of Cicero's vast knowledge of the history of elocution.

This book is a must read for philosophers, scholars of antiquity, lawyers, politicians and all others who own the task of swaying the opinion(s) of the masses. Oh, and by the way, it's a pretty good read for those who aren't interested in any of that stuff, too. 8-)


Cicero on the Emotions: Tusculan Disputations 3 and 4
Published in Hardcover by University of Chicago Press (February, 2002)
Authors: Marcus Tullius Cicero and Margaret Graver
Average review score:

The best compendium for ancient theories of emotion
The five "books" (just one in our sense of the word "book") "Tusculan Disputations" of Cicero are dedicated to existential questions like "Is dead something evil?" oder "Do wise men have emotional perturbations?" The answer of the first question cited here is crucial for emotional states, for instance fear of death. In this way this first question is subordinate to the second. M. Graver picked therefore Book 3 and 4, which are concerning with grief and emotion in general, as central parts of Ciceros work and translated them carefully into English, with useful subdivisions and an excellent commentary. Of extraordinary value is the introduction, which enables the reader to get insight into the discussions of the various schools of philosophers, and most surprising is the collection of material in Appendix A to D, which shows part of the sources (we dont have all sources at hand), which Cicero used for his - in general - independent work. You can recommend this edition especially to students who are concerned either in ancient philosophy or in historical studies of psychology.


Cicero on the Ideal Orator
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (April, 2001)
Authors: Marcus Tullius Cicero, James M. May, and Jakob Wisse
Average review score:

I got to read this before it was even published!
Doc May is currently my professor at St. Olaf College in Northfield, MN. He is one of the most brilliant men that I have ever met. We got to read his book before it was published for a literature class. It is a very good translation. I would highly recommend it to anyone.


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