From BMCR

John R. Patterson, Landscapes and Cities: Rural Settlement and Civic Transformation in Early Imperial Italy.

Brian Daley, Gregory of Nazianzus. Series: The Early Church Fathers.

Vivienne J. Gray, Xenophon On Government.

Aniello Salzano, Agli inizi della poesia cristiana latina; autori anonimi dei secc. IV-V.

Caroline Winterer, The Mirror of Antiquity. American Women and the Classical Tradition, 1750-1900.

Clemens Koehn, Krieg - Diplomatie - Ideologie. Zur Aussenpolitik hellenistischer Mittelstaaten, Historia Einzelschriften, 195.

A. Chaniotis, T. Corsten, R.S. Stroud, R.A. Tybout, Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum, Volume 52 (2002).

Joan Booth, Robert Maltby, What's in a Name? The Significance of Proper Names in Classical Latin Literature.

Christopher Shields, Aristotle.
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-03-06.html

John Gruber-Miller, When Dead Tongues Speak. Teaching Beginning Greek and Latin. American Philological Association Classical Resources Series 6.

Scott Noegel, Nocturnal Ciphers: The Allusive Language of Dreams in the Ancient Near East, American Oriental Series, 89.

Gesine Manuwald (ed.), Cicero, Philippics 3-9. Volume 1. Introduction, Text and Translation. Volume 2. Commentary. Texte und Kommentare, 30.


From RBL:

John J. Collins and Craig A. Evans, eds., Christian Beginnings and the Dead Sea Scrolls


From Scholia:


Daniel Ogden (ed.), A Companion to Greek Religion. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World.


From the Washington Post:

Alberto Manguel, Homer's The Iliad and The Odyssey: A Biography


From the Times of London:

Medea, by Euripides, translated by Robin Robertson


From Monsters and Critics

If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho Translated by Anne Carson