'John Cooper's excellent book is a notable contribution to British history, as well as to the history of the British Jewish community. The work is well-researched, perceptive, and is most handsomely produced.'<br /><b><i>Judge Israel Finestein</i></b><br /><br />'The book's main strength is its qualitative, rather than quantitative, approach, which results in a richly textured narrative of the challenges, failures, and successes of dozens of Jewish men and women, both native born and immigrant ... recommended.'<br /><b><i>F. Krome, Choice</i></b><br /><br />'A remarkable book based upon genuinely extraordinary researched. It is a detailed examination of the experience of Jewish doctors and lawyers (barrister and solicitors) in the century after the late Victorian period, drawn from evidence in a comprehensive array of sources of every kind ... Such a degree of detail has never been provided in any study of Anglo-Jewry before (nor, indeed, in many studies about English professionals of any kind) ... deserves to become known beyond the ranks of historians of Anglo-Jewry.'<br /><b><i></i><i>William D. Rubinstein, English Historical Review</i><i></i></b><br /><br />'Monumental ... the historical perspective is fascinating.'<br /><b><i>Keith Feldman, Jewish Chronicle</i><i></i></b><br /><br />'Outstanding ... To the best of my knowledge there has never previously been any work quite like it: a detailed, extremely well-informed and sophisticated account of the careers of Jewish doctors and lawyers.'<br /><b><i>William D. Rubenstein, Jewish Historical Studies</i><i></i></b><br /><br />'A remarkable work of scholarship ... There are abundant footnotes ... His Introduction is succinct and the book is written in clear grammatical prose while the proofreading has been admirable-a very rare achievement nowadays ... The list of lawyers and doctors (whose careers he describes briefly or at some length) is most extensive ... In every case with which I was personally acquainted, I found his description of the professional individual's background, career, and personal characteristics to be fair and perceptive.'<br /><b><i>Judith Freedman, Jewish Journal of Sociology</i><i></i></b><br /><br />'The painstaking research ... contributes to social history in this area ... It would make a fine retirement gift.'<br /><b><i>Janet Levin, Jewish Renaissance</i><i></i></b><br /><br />'Full of fascinating accounts of prominent-and not so prominent-individuals as well as many general observations about English Jewry ... The author has impressive mastery of the field and used both written sources and oral interviews. This book is very readable. It is an important addition to the literature on English Jewish social history and should be very useful for comparative purposes as well.'<br /><b><i>Shaul Stampfer, Religious Studies Review</i><i></i></b><br /><br />'Thorough, but always entertaining ... Cooper brings alive a host of personalities, legal and medical, many of them untreated elsewhere ... As instructive as it is entertaining, Pride versus Prejudice fills an important gap in Anglo-Jewish historiography. It is written in a plain and lucid style ... valuable and wholly absorbing.'<br /><b><i>Michael Fox, Studies in Contemporary Jewry</i><i></i></b>