Io Saturnalia!
We've owned this book for years, but I am reminded of it in particular today while I cook our Saturnalia feast out of it.
I love this book to death, I really do, but I will just say the recipes are occasionally tricky. It would get five stars as an educational read, but just three as an actual cookbook. Some of the recipes are obvious, easy, and wonderful ("Fish in a Coriander Crust" comes to mind); some, such as the barley rolls I'm making today, require substantial interpretation on the part of the cook. This is our fourth year making these barley rolls, and I believe I finally have the recipe modified to the point where we won't break our teeth on the damn things.
Now obviously, ancient cooks didn't write down recipes the way we do today, so the author is already a step or two into interpretation, just by trying to figure out what the ancient cooks meant and DID. But it's totally worth it to go get some of the odder ingredients - asafoetida (available at Indian groceries), rue and catmint (available at the local hippie natural medicine shop), passum (raisin wine, hard to find), and garum (ok, we just use Thai fish sauce). These are flavours that the western palate doesn't experience often, and it's a shame really that they've fallen out of favour, because they're interesting.
Salve! And a happy Saturnalia to you and yours!