Wayne State University Press, 1988. - 476 p.
A companion volume to Josephus, Judaism, and Christianity, this collection of essays examines the reliability of Josephus, the most important historian of Jewish antiquity. Among the areas explored by fifteen internationally known scholars are Josephus' role in our knowledge of the Biblical canon, his attitude toward women, his use of sources, and his treatment of the priests, the Sadducees, and Herod.