CAHILL N., "Household and City Organization at Olynthus", Yale University Press, New Haven & New York, 2002. In 8vo, p. xii, [2], 383. Extensively illustrated with plans and photographs. This book is an interpretive approach on the relationships between house and city, between household and community, as they were worked out in practice at Olynthus in northern Greece. Only at Olynthus can the remains of a planned city occupied for less than three generations, and so relatively unmodified by later rebuilding, be studied, and the architecture of houses but also their contents as well, with well-preserved assemblages on the final destruction floors, be considered. The archaeology of Olynthus offers a fuller and richer picture of Greek domestic and civic life than almost any other Greek site. Hardback, with publishers illustrated dust jacket, LIKE NEW overall.