“Stealing from the Gods reveals that the Romans were much like us in their richly imagined moral condemnation. Köster skillfully excavates the figure of the temple robber, a criminal stereotype every bit as fascinating and menacing to the Roman mind as the mafia don or drug kingpin is to us.”— Trevor Luke, Florida State University
“Temple robbery in the Roman world was a problem, except when it wasn’t. Isabel Köster’s new book Stealing from the Gods expertly illuminates this problem, detailing how Roman authors exploited this ambiguity to level critiques of other Romans, and in the process to clarify moral and religious values for the Roman ruling class.”— Eric Orlin, University of Puget Sound
“An extensive survey of the rhetorical arguments about ‘temple robbers’ in Ciceronian forensic oratory and Roman historiography (especially Livy and Caesar). Careful reading and literary analysis is framed by documentary material (e.g., inscribed ‘prayers for justice’ and second century CE ‘confession inscriptions’) that bring the religious background into popular, quotidian practice in historical time. For those who wonder about Roman religious belief, the book offers important evidence.”— Roberta L. Stewart, Dartmouth College
“Stealing from the Gods will be a go-to on temple robbery and temple robbers, not only for those interested in Latin historiography or oratory but in Roman history and culture in general. This book is well-positioned to make a large impact on scholarship across a variety of disciplines.”— Jonathan Master, Emory University