Lucy Shipley is the author of Experiencing Etruscan Pots: Ceramics, Bodies and Images in Etruria (2015). She lives in Devon, UK.
Balanced and fully informed. . . . Excellent. --Fred S. Kleiner Historian Shipley sets her course by identifying a select object or place as a focus for each chapter. . . . These prompt an examination of different aspects of the Etruscan world. It is a neat device enabling the author to guide us through what has actually been discovered, what the objects may say about the Etruscans, and to make robust examinations of a range of theories about them that have been put forward over time. . . . Shipley's book is as engaging as her subject. Her work leaves us eager to discover more about this most fascinating group of people. -- Minerva Shipley's concise and elegant prose serves as an ideal complement to her fascinating subject. The people of this remarkable and enigmatic culture come alive in a brilliant treatment appropriate for any audience. --Anthony Tuck, University of Massachusetts Amherst and director of the Poggio Civitate Excavations The Etruscans is cleverly written, because each chapter deals with one problem and then takes one object or place as an example of that problem. . . . This is a splendid little book, which brings the Etruscans up to date and does much to strip away the mystery that surrounds this lost civilization. -- Current World Archaeology Shipley's [bridges] deftly the ancient evidence and modern debates, and [shifts] focus seamlessly from the big picture to captivating details. She writes in an engaging, breezy style . . . Shipley's book accomplishes its mission with aplomb: it will not only hold the interest of students and scholars alike, but also speak in powerful ways to the interested lay reader. Indeed, if there is one book among the recent spate of works on the Etruscans that is likely to win over the popular imagination--one as alive to their distinct character and accomplishments as their lost legacy and muddled afterlives--Shipley's book is surely it. For The Etruscans demonstrates that new facts can be more interesting than old fiction. -- Classical Journal