Philip Freeman is the author of more than twenty books on the ancient world, including the Cicero translations How to Think about God, How to Be a Friend, How to Grow Old, and How to Run a Country (all Princeton). He holds the Fletcher Jones Chair in Humanities at Pepperdine University.
"""A lively new translation geared for maximum utility, featuring a short introduction, pithy but invented section titles (“A Brief Note on Bad Plots”) and basic endnotes.""---Timothy Farrington, Wall Street Journal ""[Freeman’s] smooth translation…[organizes] Aristotle’s arguments with bullet points and section heads. . . . There is pleasure in returning to Aristotle. . . . [his] precepts can fuel your understanding of what writing should be.""---Noor Qasim, New York Times Book Review ""[The book] resents Aristotle’s brilliant ideas in a more modern guise, and makes them more engaging. ""---Viktor Zavŕel, Graeco-Latina Bruensia"