"Maya Maskarinec is a brilliant scholar of early medieval Italy, who blends hard-nosed documentary research and skilled mining of hagiography with the ability to imaginatively reconstruct individual and cultural mentalities that guided and were guided by the historical processes she seeks to understand. Both deeply erudite and highly engaging and readable, Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome is a fitting sequel to Maskarinec's first book, City of Saints." (Alison Locke Perchuk, California State University, Channel Islands) "Domesticating Saints in Medieval and Early Modern Rome displays an astonishingly comprehensive command of the relevant primary and secondary sources combined with a forensic intelligence that reframes and recasts our understanding of the matter at hand. Maya Maskarinec brings a powerful intelligence and an impressive command of the scholarship to bear on anything she writes." (Simon Ditchfield, University of York) "Boldly foraying from late antiquity to early modernity, Maya Maskarinec shows not only how much remains to be learned about the early Roman martyrs and saints whose legacy underpins Rome's ecclesiastical topography to this day, but also how much remains to be unlearned. By demonstrating how deeply what we think we know about storied sites and their founders is informed by the artful imaginings of medieval and early modern families eager to reinvent the past to suit present institutional and genealogical ambitions, she sheds new light on the evolving strategies for self-fashioning employed by prominent individuals, families, and institutions across a millennium and more." (Hendrik Dey, author of The Making of Medieval Rome: A New Profile of the City, 4001420)