Robert Garland is the Roy D. and Margaret B. Wooster Professor of the Classics at Colgate University. His many books include The Eye of the Beholder: Deformity and Disability in the Graeco-Roman World and The Greek Way of Death.
Garland has found a unique niche in classical scholarship: writing lucid, well-researched, accessible books on important but little-studied aspects of Greek cultural and social life... His accounts of the risks colonists faced, the brutal reality behind the sources' common but terse references to population relocations, and the insecurity of the lives of exiles stand out. --Choice Garland has succeeded very well in rescuing from obscurity another corner of Greek life. --P. J. Rhodes, Anglo-Hellenic Review In bringing together the varied evidence on this topic, Wandering Greeks makes a valuable contribution to the recent and significant trend in scholarship that emphasizes mobility and connectivity in the ancient Mediterranean. Anyone interested in these issues, as well as notions of identity, belonging, and citizenship in the Greek world, would undoubtedly benefit from reading this book. --Denise Demetriou, Bryn Mawr Classical Review This volume undoubtedly represents a valuable addition to the literature on migration in the ancient world... The book covers a huge amount of ground, providing a stimulating discussion of the evidence for many different forms of migration. --Kathryn Lomas, American Historical Review This is indeed a 'vivid and empathetic' book in which the author navigates both historical and literary sources, which have been interwoven into a narrative that is thematically organized by types of 'wanderers.' --Carolina Lopez-Ruiz, The Historian