Doniger writes in a humane and distinctive voice, with humour and irreverence.
Christopher Minkowski, London Review of Books
Wendy Doniger has finally done justice to the Kamasutra, first of all by giving it a proper translation, without Sir Richard Burton's nineteenth-century misreadings and stilted style, and now in Redeeming the Kamasutra by placing it in an eminent position in the body of Indian treatises. Her work is a useful antidote to that pervasive and often violent moral policing that has seized a part of both India and the Indian diaspora in recent years.
The New York Review of Books
frank, brief, clear-eyed essays.
Nicola Barker, Spectator
Ever since the third century, the Kamasutra has been labelled in the West as the ultimate lexicon of love, but the praise of the "ooh, ah" brigade has led to its denigration in India. Westerners leaf through the pages which they believe pigeon-hole women as passive play things of men, while the Kamasutra actually is a much more complete guide to all aspects of life such as grooming, etiquette, hygiene and the arts. Women are treated as equal individuals, not men's objects of desire. It actually promotes equal rights, and at last someone has stood up and said so.
Steve Craggs, Northern Echo