"I have profited much from reading this book. It is well-researched, and its main strength lies in providing a welcome synopsis of the various disciplines which deal with Pliny and the eruption of Vesuvius. The book will certainly become a standard work for those studying and teaching the Vesuvius letters and, hopefully, encourage more interdisciplinary projects on the Epistles in general." - Bryn Mawr Classical Review"Si tratta di una magistrale interpretazione, o piuttosto messa a punto, delle vicende congiunte dei due Plinii, che comprende anche la nuova traduzione ed esegesi delle due fondamentali lettere del Giovane, a Tacito, ove narra delle vicende della morte del celebre zio, e dell’eruzione del Vesuvio...Pedar Foss ci ha mirabilmente ricordato come dalla Storia si dipanino infinite storie, tutte degne di attenzione, mai noiose, se scientificamente approcciate, ponendosi le giuste domande e possedendo i mezzi intellettuali per rispondere ad esse." - Paolo L. Bernardini, La Provincia[It is a masterly interpretation, or rather, fine-tuning, of the joint events of the two Plinii, which also includes the new translation and exegesis of the two fundamental letters of the Younger, to Tacitus, where he narrates the events of the death of his famous uncle, and of the eruption of Vesuvius...Pedar Foss admirably reminded us how from history endless stories unfold, all worthy of attention, never boring, if scientifically approached, asking the right questions, and possessing the intellectual means to answer them.]"Pliny and the Eruption of Vesuvius is an indelible masterpiece, in my estimation, representing the pinnacle of literary achievement in the realm of the iconic Vesuvian eruption. The author’s ingenious fusion of linguistic scrutiny of Pliny’s letters with a rigorous exploration of archaeological and volcanological dimensions paints an enthralling portrait of the eruption’s unfolding events." - Claudio Scarpati, GeologosVesuvius Erupted, but When Exactly? - The New York Times: Vesuvius Erupted, but When Exactly? - The New York Times"The greatest achievement of this book is that F. has taken a genuinely unique interdisciplinary approach. He examines Pliny the Younger’s Letters with cross-references to studies in the fields of volcanology and archaeology. A Plinian monograph with genuine engagement with archaeology is very exciting and has been an uncommon approach... F. provides an exciting new methodological approach for both Plinian scholars and the fields of Classics and archaeology more generally." - The Classical Review