I bought this book about twenty years ago in Waterstons, Piccadilly, London and have just got around to reading it (damn my literary sloth) and glad I did. When a section starts, 'You should consider your good fortune that, if you don't know what period of history is meant by 'the Classics', no one else does either.
A winner methinks, and full of very funny aside. Looking forward to reading this alongside my other books, watch this space! Also looking forward to teasing my classicist step-son teaching in Singapore, me being an evil historian and sworn to crush his ilk under my buskined boot!
Finished and really enjoyed it, so much so that I intended to annoy and perturb managers at work by throwing in Latin phrases into fire risk assessments (I'm an NHS Fire Officer in the day job) and see if they actually respond. First up will be 'mutatis mutandis' - The necessary changes being made' or 'you must change your underwear' - or in my case, 'repair the fire stopping, dampers and a hundred other things that need doing' inserted into the part of the report concerning something they really should do and wait to see if it actually happens. Then add some more in the next report, worth a try!
I'm ear marking Ross' other works for future reads.