Step into the Roman year with Ovid's Fasti: ritual, myth and civic time rendered in lyric sweep. Read the Roman year anew. Presented here under H. Hallam's name, Ovid's sequence of festival-poems sings again. As an epic verse collection from the Augustan age, the Fasti functions both as a roman poetry anthology and a living ritual map: its narratives fix the dates, ceremonies and local legends that organised public life. Ovid sketches rites and gods in language that marries erudition with storytelling, so mythology and rituals read as vivid scenes rather than antiquarian notes. The poem's concern with calendar observance makes it essential for anyone studying roman calendar festivals or researching ancient rome history, and its treatment of cult practice remains a key window onto ancient roman religion. That dual character - scholarly source and imaginative literature - secures the Fasti a central place in classical latin literature. For students of classics and tutors shaping a latin literature curriculum, H. Hallam's edition offers readable access to the poem's themes without losing sight of historical context. Casual readers find the surge of stories, strange customs and human detail compelling; classic-literature collectors prize the volume as a lasting companion to augustan age poetry. Presented as an ovid fasti translation attuned to both sense and style, the edition balances scholarly credibility with poetic life, and the greek and roman myths that thread through the pages remain as affecting now as they were in Ovid's world. Its images of seasonal labour, civic spectacle and personal devotion illuminate everyday life and elite ideology alike, so the Fasti serves both as poetry and as evidence. Libraries and personal collections that prize classical latin literature and ancient rome history will find this a necessary companion. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.