Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Sutcliff, Rosemary - Elaine Moss
Sutcliff, Rosemary - Elaine Moss
ELAINE MOSS
[What] is impressive about Frontier Wolf is not the story itself, nor the gradual winning through of Alexios from disgrace to honour. It is Rosemary Sutcliff's extraordinary capacity for recreating a visual and emotional picture, many-textured, of the life of a Roman garrison on the Antonine Wall as the Empire crumbled. She has the writer's equivalent of a musician's "absolute pitch"; her certainty enables her to use language that fore-echoes the future (the Votadini speak with a recognizable Celtic lilt), and to engender situations and characters that carry with them an authenticity and complexity that defy the conventional textbook image of Roman times.
Elaine Moss, "Outposts of the Empire," in The Times Literary Supplement (© Times Newspapers Ltd. (London) 1980; reproduced from The Times Literary Supplement by permission), No. 4051, November 21, 1980, p. 1323.
[The entire page is 149 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Louise S. Bechtel
- Naomi Lewis
- Lavinia R. Davis
- Louise S. Bechtel
- Elizabeth Hodges
- Margaret Sherwood Libby
- J. O. Prestwich
- Lavinia R. Davis
- Eric Hood
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Margaret Sherwood Libby
- C. S. Bennett
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Carolyn Horovitz
- Margaret Meek
- Marcus Crouch
- Robert Payne
- Padraic Colum
- SHEILA EGOFF, G. T. STUBBS, and L. F. ASHLEY
- Joan V Marder
- Eleanor Cameron
- The Times Literary Supplement
- John Rowe Townsend
- MAY HILL ARBUTHNOT and ZENA SUTHERLAND
- Feenie Ziner
- Jill Paton Walsh
- Margery Fisher
- Sarah Hayes
- Pauline Clarke
- Elaine Moss
- Ann Evans
- Marcus Crouch
- Hilary Wright
- Neil Philip
- Marcus Crouch
- Sheila A. Egoff
- Neil Philip
- Margery Fisher
- Anne Duchene
- Copyright
