Around the Classical blogosphere today:

Irene Hahn is writing about romance novels set in ancient Greece (and/or subplots of same) ...

N.S. Gill has a handy list of works of Classical interest which are in the public domain (mostly) ... (note in passing: does anyone know if Warde-Fowler's Roman Festivals is public domain?)

... which reminds me, a while ago JM-Y posted on the Classics list about the existence, online (wow), of Cook's Zeus (yes... the whole thing) ... the same site has de Coulanges' Ancient City as well ... and I just noticed Anthon's Latin-English (and vice versa) dictionary there too ...

Adrian Murdoch comments on a review of Robert Harris' Imperium ... he also has found an interesting piece from Newsweek on the 'obsession' we have with Ancient Rome (I haven't had a chance to read this yet) ...

Juanvi Santa Isabel has another roundup of goings on the the Classical blogosphere from a Spanish perspective ...

We mentioned the audio video disco blog yesterday (would the owner please identify him/herself?) ... today there's a guest post by his/her class about Catullus ...

Nathan Bauman is looking at hospitality in books I-IV of the Odyssey ... I note also a post on continuity and discontinuity between the Odyssey and the Iliad ... and some miscellaneous thoughts on Odyssey IV ...

Eurylochus is smitten by (with?) Aegle ...

Mary Beard is writing about the fiddling Nero ...

Laura Gibbs offers us a Latin crossword, a proverb, and a passage from Hosea ...

Mischa Hooker comments on that Greek Ode to Stalin which William Annis posted t'other day ...

The Stoa alerts us to an interesting project for researchers called Zotero ...

Phil Harland writes about diversity in Second Temple Judaism ...

Ed Flinn has a coin of Theodosius ...